Museum curators are recommended to develop a concept of creating a barrier-free space for groups of people with reduced mobility and information accessibility for people with visual and hearing impairments.
The first reports based on the results of the inclusiveness audit of the most important museums of Ukraine were prepared by the experts of the project "Inclusive Travels in Ukraine: accessibility of museums of Ukraine". In particular, experts have already monitored some museums in Lviv and Pereyaslav.
After visiting the Lviv National Art Gallery named after Borys Voznytsky with the Pototsky Palace and the Lozynsky Palace, as well as the State Museum of Natural History of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Maria Nikitina, an expert on inclusivity, stated in her reports that persons with disabilities, who have impaired vision, hearing, or the musculoskeletal system, can visit these cultural institutions only with an escort. The expert will recommend that these museums develop the concept of creating a barrier-free space for people with limited mobility and the concept of information accessibility for people with visual and hearing impairments, as well as conduct training for museum employees on the topic of accompanying and communicating with visitors with disabilities.
Many problems with inclusivity were also revealed by the audit of the Museum of Folk Architecture and Life of the Central Dnipro region in Pereyaslav, which was carried out by Volodymyr Vysotskyi, a consultant on the architecture of inclusive spaces. In particular, he considers the ticket office, most of the footpaths on the territory (except for the central alley), entrances to all buildings, structures and areas of the museum to be inaccessible for visitors with reduced mobility, despite the fact that some of them have ramps.
At the same time, some premises of the Taras Shevchenko "Testament" Museum and the Hryhoriy Skovoroda Memorial Museum have been recognized by an expert as conditionally accessible for children, wheelchair users, the blind, and other groups of visitors. Among the existing elements of accessibility, the expert noted rest areas in front of the entrances to both museums.
Project experts also plan to assess the level of inclusiveness of the most visited museums in Kyiv. Expert reports will be available in their entirety on the website of the Inclusive Travels in Ukraine project after its official presentation.