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Workplace accessibility: accessibility equipment, balustrades and compliance — KYTOM
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Workplace accessibility: accessibility equipment, balustrades and compliance

Anticipating accessibility at the programming stage costs 3% of the budget. Catching up after delivery costs 12%, and 60 to 70% of the non-compliances identified come down to millimetric details: a handle at 1.05 m instead of 0.90 m, a contrast at 45% instead of 70%, a 3 cm step on a restroom threshold. Across the 15,000 m² that Kytom delivers each year in the office sector, we identify 4 to 8 critical points per floor (thresholds, isolated steps, restrooms, meeting rooms) that determine acceptance.

Our team coordinates 4 to 6 trades (metalwork, joinery, electrical signage, contrast painting, anti-slip flooring, inspection office) and has each stage validated by an accredited inspection body (Apave, Bureau Veritas, Socotec).

The framework is well known: Title I for premises not open to the public, public-access building (ERP) regulations as soon as a public is received, NF P01-012 for guardrails. The difference is made in the execution.

Here is how we structure a compliant project, from diagnosis to handover of the public accessibility register, in 12 weeks on average.

Workplace accessibility: accessibility equipment, balustrades and compliance

1 area of expertise under "Workplace accessibility: accessibility equipment, balustrades and compliance"

01
the framework

Three texts, six dimensions to maintain to the millimetre

Three regulatory frameworks overlap on an office floor. The provisions of Title I govern premises not open to the public. ERP regulations apply as soon as a public is received. The RGAA frames the digital interfaces accessible from these places.

The six structuring dimensions we check on every operation:

Point Regulatory value Reference
Evacuation dead end 10 m maximum R4216-9
Main corridor 1.40 m clear width Wheelchair crossing
Secondary corridor 0.90 m minimum NF P91-201
Accessibility door width 0.80 m of usable passage ERP order
Tolerated step 2 cm without ramp NF P98-351
Opening effort 50 N maximum 2017 order

In practice at Kytom, the profession’s attention focuses heavily on widths and ramps, whereas 60 to 70% of the non-compliances identified at acceptance concern execution details. A handle 15 mm too high, a contrast 25 points too low, a step 1 cm too thick: these millimetric deviations cause an ERP inspection to fail just as much as a structural shortcoming. An unfavourable inspection suspends operation, and the rework costs 2 to 3 times the price of an integration into the initial programme. This is why we have the plans validated by an accredited inspection body before execution, a non-negotiable step on ERPs.

02
the equipment

Balustrades, handrails, ramps: three families, three sets of dimensions

Three families of equipment structure the physical compliance work. Each meets a dimensional standard derived from NF P01-012 and the ERP/IOP accessibility orders.

Equipment Height / slope Key specification Cost excl. tax
Mezzanine balustrade 1 m (1.10 m if fall>1 m) Rail spacing<=11 cm 180 to 350 EUR/lm
Stair handrail 0.80 to 1 m 28 cm extension at the ends 90 to 180 EUR/lm
Accessibility ramp 5% over 10 m, 8% over 2 m 1.40 m landing every 10 m 400 to 900 EUR/lm
Warning alert strip At 50 cm from the step nosing Depth 40 cm, contrast>=70% 60 to 120 EUR/lm
Contrasted step nosing Contrast>=70% Anti-slip R10 minimum 25 to 60 EUR/lm

On an 850 m² office floor (our average intervention area), the typical inventory includes 12 to 18 metres of handrails and 25 to 40 metres of balustrades. NF P98-351 tactile signage is placed at the top of descending stairs. The required visual contrasts reach 70% luminance difference on step nosings, glazed doors and obstacles. We price these items as early as the tender stage to avoid acceptance change orders.

03
accessibility evacuation

One EAS per level, to be programmed before the APD, not after

Article R4227-5 of the Labour Code conditions a floor’s capacity on the number of passage units of its exits. A single emergency staircase of 1.40 to 1.50 metres allows a maximum of 100 people per floor.

The accessibility-specific evacuation devices we systematically integrate:

  • Safe waiting area (EAS): mandatory whenever stair evacuation is not possible independently, 1 per level, 2 m² for 2 wheelchairs.
  • Two-way alert device: voice link with the security control centre, backup power supply.
  • Fire resistance: walls CF 1 hour minimum, door PF 30 minimum.
  • Signage: standardised pictogram visible from the circulation areas.

The circulation/usable area ratio is between 15 and 20%. In practice at Kytom, about 30% of renovation operations require a revision of the zoning as early as the programming phase: an EAS requires 4 to 6 m² of dedicated functional area, which is taken from the adjacent offices if it has not been reserved at the site plan. Anticipating at the programming stage costs 0 EUR of plans. Arbitrating at the APD stage costs 2 to 3 relocated workstations and 8 to 15 KEUR of partition rework.

04
your gains

3 to 8% of the budget well placed are worth 12% poorly placed

Three economic trade-offs structure the project, based on verifiable data.

The accessibility budget represents 3 to 8% of the total cost when integration is done from the programming stage, 8 to 15% with deferred compliance. An isolated accessibility item (ramp + handrail + signage for one access) is priced between 4,000 and 12,000 EUR excl. tax depending on materials and complexity.

The three points that determine the ROI:

  • Landlord coordination on common areas: half of our operations concern tenants, and bringing the lobbies and common circulation areas into compliance falls to the landlord (article 7 of the standard commercial lease). We carry out this negotiation upstream.
  • Invisible disabilities: hearing, partial sight and cognition account for 80% of disability situations according to INSEE. The budget trade-off shifts towards audible signage and contrasts rather than mobility adjustments alone.
  • Accessibility restroom: minimum 1 adapted cubicle with a transfer space of 0.80 x 1.30 m, a folding grab bar at 0.70-0.80 m, an accessible washbasin at 0.85 m maximum.

The profession devotes 70 to 80% of the accessibility budget to physical equipment (ramps, balustrades, restrooms) versus 20 to 30% to contrast and tactile-audible signage, whereas the actual distribution of disability situations reverses the priority. Across 11 offices delivered by Kytom since 2006, shifting 10 points of budget towards contrasts and signage reduces the acceptance reservation rate by half.

05
Method
  1. On-site diagnosis
    Over the first two weeks, our teams survey the 20 to 40 regulatory points applicable to the floor, identify the NF P01-012 deviations and draft the preliminary accessibility register. This deliverable serves as the contractual basis for pricing and trade scheduling.
  2. Studies and inspection body validation
    Weeks 3 and 4: execution plans, guardrail calculations, file submitted to the accredited inspection body (Apave, Bureau Veritas, Socotec), Cerfa 13824*04 filing if ERP. No works contract is launched before a favourable response, a non-negotiable step to secure acceptance.
  3. Works on an occupied site
    Weeks 5 to 9: phasing in zones of 200 to 300 m², coordination of 4 to 6 trades (metalwork, joinery, electrical signage, contrast painting, anti-slip flooring), evening and weekend interventions when operations require it.
  4. Final checks
    Weeks 10 and 11: verification of contrast>=70%, steps<=2 cm, opening efforts<=50 N, handle heights at 0.90 m, continuity of tactile signage. Each point is measured, photographed and recorded in the accessibility identity file.
  5. Acceptance and register
    Week 12: handover of the accessibility identity file, signed certificate of compliance, update of the public accessibility register, mandatory since the order of 19 April 2017. The client leaves with a file enforceable against any subsequent inspection.
06
Frequently asked questions

Which regulations apply to an office floor with no public reception?

An office floor with no public reception falls under Labour Code Title I. Obligations cover access, 1.40 m circulation routes, adapted sanitary facilities, a maximum door opening force of 50 N and steps of 2 cm maximum. Once external visitors are received, ERP regulations apply, requiring an approved inspection body and a Cerfa 13824*04 form. The RGAA applies to digital interfaces. KYTOM determines the floor’s status from the diagnostic stage.

05 — Inspirations

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