Use this icons to outline certain accessibility features, for instance, that an elevator is partly accessible for wheelchairs.
There are a lot of accessibility icon sets out there. Many looking really fancy, but its not always clear what they really mean. But meaning is essential here. People with disabilities only rely on icons, if they can trust them. And they only trust them, if they know what they mean.
If you use such icons on a website, on site, etc. please make sure you know the icon and what it means. For instance, if you label a toilet fully accessible for wheelchairs, neither can the room have steps nor there is no space next to the toilet to park a wheelchair.
We recommend to use these icons in certain ways to help people understand what they actually mean. To help you determine, when to use an icon, you can have a look in the following table.
Icons are provided as SVG files. This format allows everybody to modify and adapt icons for a given use case.
This icon set is based on the icons maintained by the Behindertenverband Leipzig e.V. They work for years with people with disabilities. Based on their knowledge and feedback, they refined the icons.
Source: http://www.le-online.de/zeichenengl.htm
Icon set is licensed under the terms of the Creatives Commons Attribution 4.0 license (CC-BY 4.0). For more information have a look into LICENSE.
Please use the following attribution text:
Behindertenverband Leipzig e.V., Stadt Leipzig, Teilhabeplan 2018,
https://github.com/Behindertenverband-Leipzig/accessibility-icons