“…These statutes place deep emphasis on designing to facilitate PWDs’ level of independence towards using facilities to gain entry to, accomplish tasks, navigate areas and exit buildings on their own, as this demonstrates the measure of accessibility such users experience (National Disability Authority, 2023). However, diverse research on the design of public buildings mostly reveal poor levels of accessibility (Calder et al , 2018; Gladstone, 2015; Lontsi and Wandjie, 2022; Peterson, 2021; Pinto et al , 2021; Rimmer et al , 2017) and further portray the inclination to disregard accessibility issues in building practices (Rieger and Strichfaden, 2016) as regulatory controls are reported to be weak (Imrie and Kumar, 2010). These evidence primarily depict absent or reduced independent access to facilities by PWDs in such buildings, which falls short of the societal responsibility to ensure access for all (Carlsson et al , 2022).…”