We have produced new guidance to help ensure sport and leisure facilities are safe, welcoming and accessible to all.
Aimed at planners, architects, building owners and operators, our Accessible and inclusive sports facilities (AISF) guidance encourages the design of spaces that reduce or remove barriers to being more active.
That includes creating and maintaining facilities that are accessible to disabled people and meet the needs of our vibrant and diverse communities, such as those related to faith, sex, sexuality and gender identity.
The document is the current standard in this area, replacing our previous Accessible Sports Facilities Design Guidance, originally published in 2010.
Its expanded title and content are reflective of a broader, more nuanced approach to inclusion – another step in our long-term Uniting the Movement vision of unlocking the advantages of sport and physical activity for everyone.
In the introduction to the guidance, our director of equality, diversity and inclusion in sport, Viveen Taylor, writes: "The built environments where movement and physical activity take place can sometimes be a person’s biggest barrier to being more active.
"This guidance provides the technical Information needed to ensure that our facilities are not just functionally accessible but intuitive, inviting, and capable of both attracting and meeting the needs of our increasingly diverse communities."