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Japanese Govt Says Hotels Must Be Wheelchair Accessible Before Tokyo 2020

  New hotels in Japan with more than 50 rooms will be required to provide wheelchair-friendly accommodation, the government said on Tuesday, as the country … Continue reading Japanese Govt Says Hotels Must Be Wheelchair Accessible Before Tokyo 2020


Toshiro Muto, the CEO of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics organising committee, delivers a speech during the 133rd IOC session in Buenos Aires, on October 08, 2018. JUAN MABROMATA / AFP
Toshiro Muto, the CEO of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics organising committee, delivers a speech during the 133rd IOC session in Buenos Aires, on October 08, 2018.JUAN MABROMATA / AFP

 

New hotels in Japan with more than 50 rooms will be required to provide wheelchair-friendly accommodation, the government said on Tuesday, as the country gears up to host the Tokyo 2020 Olympics and Paralympics.

Japan is hoping to attract around 40 million tourists annually by the time of the Games and concerns have been expressed over the quantity of accommodation and facilities for disabled travelers.

Under the revised laws, which come into effect on September 1 next year, at least one percent of rooms in newly built and refurbished hotels or traditional inns must be barrier-free for wheelchair users.

“Through efforts to improve travel and lodging for the disabled, we hope to make the Games a success and create a society” where people with and without disabilities can live together, Olympics Minister Yoshitaka Sakurada told reporters on Tuesday.

According to a government survey conducted last year, only 0.4 percent of around 100,000 rooms at more than 600 hotels or inns were “barrier-free”.

Under the government definition, a barrier-free room must have an entrance wider than 80 centimeters (30 inches), a bathroom with handrails and no steps dividing rooms.

Tokyo has already embarked on an overhaul of its infrastructure with an eye to filling stadiums for the 2020 Games.

Elevators and ramps are being installed across Tokyo’s subway system, with officials saying around 90 percent of stations are now wheelchair accessible.

AFP