AXS Map

AXS Map is a user-generated database of accessible locations in all major cities.[1] Powered by GoogleMaps API, AXS Map functions by providing users with a database of locations that they can edit with ratings and reviews of accessibility metrics for disabled individuals.[2] This in turn allows other users to see these reviews, screening which locations they choose to travel to, and adding their own reviews of the places they enter to expand the database.[3] Rather than leaving accessibility reviews to specialists, AXS Map allows any member of the public to use the tool to report their experience.[4] As well as offering accessibility ratings for the mobility impaired, AXS Map also reviews accessibility for the visually and hearing impaired.[5]

The AXS Map logo

History

AXS Map was founded by Jason DaSilva in 2012.[6] DaSilva had been diagnosed with primary progressive multiple sclerosis several years prior to the creation of AXS Map, and began to recognize that many of places surrounding him in New York City were not accessible. Inspired by his increasing difficulties navigating through his daily life, DaSilva created an AXS Map as an app and web database to help people with disabilities.[7]

AXS Map is being expanded to map accessibility in all of the world's major cities. It is available to access online, and by iPhone and Android phones.[8] AXS map received major media attention in 2014, including a national profile by Dr. Sanjay Gupta and a feature in Oprah Magazine.[9][10] DaSilva presented AXS Map at the White House in November 2015.[11] In a profile of AXS Map in his book Mad Genius, Randy Paul Gage wrote that AXS Map "has now morphed into a movement to map out a searchable database of accessible sites."[12] By mid-2019, AXS Map had been used in over 200 cities.[7] AXS Map has been supported by Google, the Government of Ontario, the Canada Media Fund, the Fledgling Fund, New York Community Trust, and the Rubin Foundation, and has had many partners over the years, including Stanford University, Parsons School of Design, New York University, and Kwantlen Polytechnic University.

Mapathons

AXS Mapathons are events in which community members come together using AXS Map to map the accessibility of their neighborhoods, and are held regularly.[13] Mapathons have been held in New York City, San Francisco, Toronto, and over 50 other cities. Outside of North America, Mapathons have been held in the countries of Georgia and Paraguay. As part of Google Serve, Mapathons also take place in many Google offices around the world. Significant Google Serve Mapathons have happened in New York, Toronto, Mountain View, Austin, and Atlanta.

gollark: They're heavy, you know.
gollark: Planes couldn't land because tinsels kept crashing into them.
gollark: The REAL reason for no biome prizes: confusion with golds.
gollark: That'd be very confusing.
gollark: Ah, but if it was rare in the biomes, by existing logic it would also be in the market.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.