ttc accessibility map

Someone created a TTC subway map with only accessible stations

Getting from point A to point B using public transit can be hellish, especially when you factoring in things like delays, overcrowding and... you know, other people.

Imagine if there were also restrictions in place that meant you couldn't get on or off the train at almosthalf of the subway stations in Toronto?

For people with disabilities or injuries that prohibit them from taking the stairs, moving throughout the city can not only be uncomfortable, but sometimes impossible.

The TTC isconstantly workingto make public transit more accessible for everyone, and has indeedmade quite a lot of progressin that regard since the 1990s.

All TTC buses and bus routes are currently equipped to serve passengers using wheelchairs, walkers and other mobility devices, as are subway trains — but only 43 of the system's 75 stations have elevators (something, it should be noted, that the transit agencyhopes to fix by 2025).

Toronto-based landscape architecture graduateNatascha Hufgardhas compiled a map based on the TTC's own public information to highlight how much harder it is for those with limited mobility to ride the subway.

"TTC Map with only accessible stations," they wrote when sharing the image. "How would your day change if this is what your map looked like?"

ttc accesibility map

This version of the TTC subway map shows the only stations at which elevators are available. Image via Natascha Hufgard/Reddit.

"You should update the map with elevators that are down for maintenance lol," replied one commenter, raising an important point.

"If a staircase were completely unusable at a station, a lot of passengers would be extremely upset that they had to reroute and potentially miss important transfers or meetings," said Hufgard.

This modified map is making many in Toronto think today about what it it's like to live in a world where taking the stairs isn't always an option.

For theestimated 3.8 million adult Canadianswho report being limited in their daily activities due to a disability (as of 2012), it's just the way things are right now.

Lead photo by

Natascha Hufgard/Reddit


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