This website contains information on accessible guides, including a collection of pictograms and general information about accessible guides and signs.
The information is based on the joint Accessibility Symbols project by the Helsinki for All project and the stakeholders, carried out in 2010–2011. The project designed and collected accessibility-related pictograms, as well as pictograms pertaining to general services that must be accessible and understandable.
The databank contains symbols that were designed and drawn during the project, but also existing accessibility symbols. Previous designs of pictograms by various operators were used as the basis for the new symbols. The symbols designed during the project form a uniform set of symbols that can be used in a diverse way in service maps, signs, information boards and online notifications. The symbols were designed by Kokoro & Moi. The symbols created during the project can be found here (pdf, in Finnish).
In addition to the accessibility symbols, the databank contains symbols connected to various services. Furthermore, the website offers tips on standards and design guidelines that contain pictograms.
Accessibility
The accessibility section contains pictograms that can be used to describe a site’s accessibility on its website, communicate the locations of accessible services at the site or guide users to an accessible route.
When using the accessibility symbols, a service, space or building marked with a symbol must comply with the accessibility criteria. Help with assessing the accessibility of museums and other cultural services can be found on the Culture for All website.
ISA stands for International Symbol of Access, the universal symbol for persons with reduced mobility.
The ISA symbol is used for instance to label a step-free entrance to a building, an accessible WC or parking spaces for the disabled. It may also be used to indicate a step-free access route or accessible service (e.g. the way to the lifts or an accessible dressing room at a sports facility).
The official ISA symbol may be used on a blue or black background. The symbol may be reversed.
The pictograms in the ‘Public transport’ section are used to guide the public transport in Helsinki in generally and in the point of view of accessibility.
For more information on these symbols, please contact to Helsinki Region Transport, HSL.
Train
Bus
Taxi
Helsinki Region Transport (HSL)
Bus
Commuter train
Metro
Tram
Ferry
Accessible bus/tram stop
Prams
Source: HSL
Leisure time
The ‘Leisure time’ section includes pictograms related to culture, sports and other recreation. These pictograms can be used in signage, on maps and in brochures.
Tactile images for playground equipment and the symbols intended for them were developed in the design segment of the Helsinki for All project, where a design guideline for tactile images for outdoor use was compiled and pilot versions of tactile maps were developed. These symbols and signs are designed mainly for tactile images and maps for visually impaired persons.
The design segment was conducted in cooperation with the City of Helsinki craft workshop, the Finnish Federation of the Visually Impaired, the Finnish Association of People with Physical Disabilities and Sito Oy.
Museum
Theatre
Swimming bath
Swimming place
Nature trail
Tourist attraction
Tactile images on playground equipment
The tactile images and signs for playground equpment were designed for the accessible playground in Ratsaspuisto in Helsinki. The illustrations include the figure of a child at the same scale as the equipment depicted.
Sand table
A sand table is installed on the side of a sand box so that a person in a wheelchair can access it.
Roundabout
This roundabout at the Ratsaspuisto playground is a pedal roundabout; its symbol shows the saddle seats.
Swing
Playground shelter
Slide
Lying board at a sandbox
A lying board is a platform fixed to a sandbox on which a child can lie down and reach the sand with his/her hands. The board may be placed on the side or in the middle of a sandbox.
Platform rocker
Pony, wooden animal figure
There are three pony figures of different sizes in Ratsaspuisto; the Pony sign was developed to illustrate them.
Rocking swing
Premises and services
The ‘Premises and services’ section contains symbols needed for signs and maps at various facilities. These symbols may also be used in indoor signs, some of them as tactile images.
The ‘one-sided access WC’ symbol should be used with the ISA symbol when the minimum lateral space of 800 mm for a wheelchair user is only available on one side of the toilet seat
Such a WC is primarily suitable for unassisted wheelchair users. Such WCs may be provided in mirror-image pairs, in which case users can choose which one to use according to their capabilities.
Child care room
Dressing room, women
Dressing room, men
Washroom, women
Washroom, men
Marking an accessible dressing room and washroom
An accessible dressing room and washroom can be marked with the ISA symbol alone if they are separate and intended for unisex or family use.
An accessible room adjacent to women’s or men’s dressing rooms and washrooms can be designated using the dressing room and washroom symbols shown above together with the ISA symbol.
Washroom, shower
Sauna
An accessible sauna can be designated with the sauna icon together with the ISA symbol.
Meeting room
Internet access point
Cafe
Service points, offices
Church, parish hall
Post office
Museum
Theatre
Service centre for the elderly
Standardised symbols
The standardised symbols section contains pictograms and signs whose use involves certain restrictions. The International Symbol of Access (ISA) is standardised, but it is also defined as public domain, even though the use of standardised pictograms usually requires a licence. With some pictograms or signs, a service must meet certain predetermined requirements and a right to use them must be applied for from the operator that controls them. For example, the symbol of an accessible nature trail may only be used if the trail meets particular requirements, e.g. in terms of gradient, flatness and width.
ISA stands for International Symbol of Access, the universal symbol for persons with reduced mobility.
The ISA symbol is used for instance to label a step-free entrance to a building, an accessible WC or parking spaces for the disabled. It may also be used to indicate a step-free access route or accessible service (e.g. the way to the lifts or an accessible dressing room at a sports facility).
The official ISA symbol may be used on a blue or black background. The symbol may be reversed.
Induction loop
Plain language logo
First aid station
Source: SFS 4424
Train
Bus
Taxi
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