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A qualitative study on how Danish landscape architectural firms understand and work with accessibility

Marie Christoffersen Gramkow (Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg, Denmark)
Marcus Tang Merit (Institute of Architecture, Urbanism and Landscape, Royal Danish Academy – Architecture, Design, Conservation,Copenhagen, Denmark)
Ulrika Karlsson Stigsdotter (Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg, Denmark)

Archnet-IJAR

ISSN: 2631-6862

Article publication date: 5 April 2022

Issue publication date: 20 October 2022

171

Abstract

Purpose

During the past decade, Danish policies and legislation have increasingly focused on accessibility, which, by virtue of adopting the UN Sustainable Development Goals, has spurred new demands for the expertise of Danish landscape architects. Surveys indicate as much as 27% of the Danish population have a physical disability. Therefore, landscape architectural firms play an important role in designing accessible, public and green spaces, which could reduce the number of people who experience disability in their everyday life arising from inaccessible designs. Despite this, peer-reviewed research has not attempted to qualitatively understand how landscape architects approach accessibility in their daily practice.

Design/methodology/approach

Based on a grounded theory analysis of 15 semi-structured qualitative interviews with randomly selected landscape architectural firms, this study aims to describe how landscape architectural firms approach and perceive accessibility.

Findings

The results of the study show a complex understanding of accessibility among practising landscape architects, with firms focusing on the role of Danish building regulations, the programming of accessibility and professional aesthetic dilemmas. Moreover, accessibility is perceived with some frustration as an element that takes valuable space from green areas due to clients' lack of willingness to provide resources for integrated solutions, landscape architects' own limited expertise and knowledge of integrated accessibility solutions and insufficient regulatory leeway.

Originality/value

As accessibility is a major element of the tasks within contemporary landscape architecture, graduates need additional training in accessibility, which, in turn, necessitates additional research into accessible design solutions.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank all the participating landscape architects/firms for their valuable contributions. Also, thank you to Patrik Karlsson Nyed for valuable help in the selection phase, and to Masashi Kajita and Jonna Majgaard Krarup for feedback. This study was made possible with financial support from The Bevica Fonden (ID436 and ID798), Lokale og Anlægsfonden (2018-F-0001), Nordea-fonden (02-2018-1391), 15. Juni Fonden (2018-H-31A and 2108-H-31B) and Innovation Fund Denmark (0153-00044B).

Citation

Gramkow, M.C., Merit, M.T. and Stigsdotter, U.K. (2022), "A qualitative study on how Danish landscape architectural firms understand and work with accessibility", Archnet-IJAR, Vol. 16 No. 3, pp. 536-553. https://doi.org/10.1108/ARCH-08-2021-0233

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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