BARRIER-AWARE WAYFINDING — INSIGHTS → FLOWS → PROTOTYPE (DEMO) → SYSTEM → HANDOFF

Step-free routing that adapts to elevators, ramps, and real-world constraints

Designed a trust-first navigation flow that explains accessibility tradeoffs clearly and reroutes fast when conditions change.
Delivered an interactive demo + reusable patterns (filters, confidence signals, edge states) with ship-ready specs for consistent rollout.

Metrics: 8 screens • 10 components • iterations • usability checks


ROLE

Product/UX Designer

EXPERTISE

End-to-end UX • Interaction Design • Systems Thinking

YEAR

2025

Project description

Project description

AccessMap is an accessibility-first navigation system that helps people choose routes that match real mobility constraints—not just the shortest path. I translated barrier signals (step-free options, slope/grade, curb cuts, surface quality, and temporary blockers like elevator outages/construction) into a trust-first routing experience with clear tradeoffs and confidence cues—so users can move with control even when data is imperfect.

Built to ship and scale, the work focuses on decision moments: filter → compare tradeoffs → start route → detect issues → reroute/recover. I delivered an interactive demo prototype plus a reusable component + state system (missing data, conflicts, outages, reroutes) with handoff-ready specs—so teams can iterate fast, align stakeholders quickly, and roll out consistent patterns across cities.

Timeline

4–6 weeks — Discovery → requirements + constraint mapping → IA + route logic → flows → hi-fi UI → interactive prototype (demo) → usability loops + iteration → handoff

Why this matters

Most maps assume a “default body.” For wheelchair users, people with injuries, seniors, and caregivers, stairs/steep slopes aren’t a minor inconvenience—they’re a hard stop. AccessMap reframes routing as a trust + safety problem: if constraints aren’t explicit, people can’t plan safely. By making accessibility signals visible and designing resilient fallback states (missing data, blocked paths, sudden outages), AccessMap enables inclusive navigation that can scale across cities while keeping users in control.

Process

Process

I treated this as a high-stakes UX problem where reliability, clarity, and accessibility are non-negotiable—because the cost of a wrong route is real.

1) Cross-functional + constraints

Partnered with PM + Engineering to translate [accessibility constraints + data gaps] into user flows, edge states, and handoff-ready specs—shipping under real technical constraints.

2) Templates/flows/diagrams

Used templates to rapidly produce process flows, conceptual diagrams, and IA—aligning stakeholders early and reducing rework downstream.

3) Fast iteration

Iterated quickly on flows → wireframes → hi-fi mocks → prototypes, incorporating feedback, usability signals, and feasibility constraints to refine the routing.

Research & Insights

Identified primary user groups: wheelchair users, cane users, stroller users, travelers with luggage, and people with temporary injuries.

Mapped core jobs-to-be-done:

  • Reach destination without barriers (no stairs / unsafe slopes).

  • Know what to expect before starting (surface, incline, curb cuts).

  • Recover fast when conditions change (outages, closures, missing data).

    Found key pain points:

  • Uncertainty (hidden stairs/ramps, “step-free” claims not reliable)

  • Anxiety from last-minute obstacles

  • Lack of route confidence and limited fallback options

  • Confusing tradeoffs (shorter vs safer vs smoother)

Problem framming

How might we make accessibility constraints (steps, slope, surface, outages) understandable and controllable—so users can trust a route before they commit and recover instantly if reality changes?

Information Architecture & Flows

Designed flows around decision moments, not screens:

  • Route selection: compare accessible options with clear badges (step-free, low-slope, smooth surface).

  • Route explanation: “Why this route?” breakdown (tradeoffs, risk flags, confidence).

  • Navigation: live guidance + proactive alerts (upcoming steep segment, missing curb cut, elevator outage).

  • Recovery: one-tap reroute + report barrier + switch to safer mode (minimum-risk route).

Validation & Iteration

Prototype testing focused on:

  • Time to choose a safe route (decision speed without confusion)

  • Comprehension of slope/steps info (users can predict effort + risk)

  • Confidence before starting navigation (trust signal clarity) Iterated on filter clarity, route badges, and “Explain this route” affordances—reducing ambiguity and improving decision confidence.

Solution

Solution

AccessMap turns messy, real-world accessibility constraints into a calm, trustworthy navigation experience—so users can choose confidently, know what to expect, and recover instantly when conditions change.

1) Design system contribution

Built reusable components + variants (tokens, layout rules, states) and contributed patterns to a scalable design system for consistent UI across features.

2) Prototyping + spec handoff

Delivered clickable hi-fi prototypes + clean specs (redlines, variants, empty/loading/error/recovery) and supported implementation with dev collaboration + QA.

Step-free and Low-stress routing

Users can choose routes using clear, controllable constraints:

  • Step-free mode (avoid stairs entirely)

  • Max slope tolerance (e.g., gentle / moderate / strict)

  • Surface quality filters (smooth / uneven / unknown) Elevator status preference (avoid outage risk when possible)

  • Curb-cut presence (prefer confirmed curb cuts)

Confidence-based route cards

Each route includes decision-first clarity:

  • Accessibility badges (steps, slope, surface, curb cuts, elevators)

  • Confidence score (data coverage + recency + community verification)

  • “Why this route?” explanation (tradeoffs + risk flags + what to expect)

  • Fallback options (safer alternative + minimum-risk route)

Community-powered reporting

Reliability improves through lightweight reporting:

  • Report barriers in 2 taps (stairs, blocked ramp, broken elevator, construction)

  • Upvote / verify reports to strengthen trust signals

  • “Last verified” timestamps + source labels (sensor/community/official)

  • Route warnings update quickly to prevent surprises mid-tri

⭐️

Connect to Content

Add layers or components to make infinite auto-playing slideshows.

Results

Results

Outcomes from AccessMap’s end-to-end UX work—focused on reducing uncertainty, speeding up decisions, and building trust for accessibility-critical navigation. Delivered as a demo-ready story and a reusable system that teams can ship consistently.

Faster route decisions

Route cards + accessibility badges made tradeoffs scannable (step-free, slope/grade, surface), so users compare options quickly instead of guessing.


Impact → faster “safe route” selection • fewer back-and-forth checks • lower decision fatigue

Higher confidence before starting navigation

“Why this route?” explanations + visible constraints made difficulty predictable upfront—reducing mid-trip surprises and anxiety.

Impact → fewer abandoned routes mid-trip • stronger trust in recommendations • clearer expectation-setting

Better recovery when the real world changes

One-tap reroute + barrier alerts supported quick recovery during elevator outages, construction, or missing data.

Impact → Fewer failed trips, smoother continuation even on imperfect routes.

More reliable experience through feedback loops

Community reporting + verification signals improved data quality and kept routes current.

Impact → Higher confidence over time, clearer “last verified” cues, stronger long-term usability.

TL;DR

I turned accessibility constraints into a shippable, trust-first routing system—clear tradeoffs, confidence signals, and fast reroutes—delivered as a demo-ready prototype with edge-state coverage and handoff-ready specs.

Open to UX/Product Design Internships

© 2025 Prakhar Dewangan

Open to UX/Product Design Internships

© 2025 Prakhar Dewangan

Create a free website with Framer, the website builder loved by startups, designers and agencies.