Accessible - Seats

From Akvopedia
Revision as of 01:28, 31 January 2015 by Winona (talk | contribs) (Published from sandbox)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
Stone seat
Wooden stool or chair
Metal framed bathing bench with woven seat made of recycled tyre inner tubes
Suitable for: bathers with difficulty standing to bathe, e.g. poor balance, mobility difficulties, stiffness, heavily pregnant, high fever.


Construction Advantages Disadvantages Improvements / variations Cost / labour
Stone seat
  • Locally available materials (e.g. stones, concrete slab)
  • Durable, strong
  • Repels water, easy to clean
  • Stones could be heavy so hard to move
  • Might be rough and uncomfortable
  • Use bricks plastered with cement screed or clay paste to make seat smooth
  • Inflated inner tube can be placed on rock for comfort
Low
Wooden stool or chair

Seat made or bought locally according to the user's specifications

  • Seat lacks drainage
  • Unfinished wood will quickly deteriorate
  • Seal wood with paint/varnish to make it waterproof
  • To improve drainage, replace solid seat with slats, or add holes in seat (see below)
Seats4.png
Medium
Metal framed bathing bench with woven seat made of recycled tyre inner tubes
  • Soft seat is comfortable to sit
  • Rubber repels water
  • Webbing provides good drainage
  • User sinks into seat, so can be difficult to get up without support
  • Might start to sag with extended use

Wood frame instead of metal

Medium


Acknowledgements

WaterAid logo.png
WEDC logo.png