Wheelchair Accessible Bathroom

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Business Details

Accessibility
Wheelchair accessible entrance

About

Wheelchair Accessible Bathroom fills a specific niche in a city full of gaps. Sidewalks and storefronts can present obstacles, but this public stall proves the basics should come standard. It belongs not to a business or museum, but to anyone using city streets. No membership or purchase puts it in reach, and its presence matters most when the alternatives narrow down to none.

At New York, NY 10003, a map marker pins down the exact stall anyone with a key or memorized route can reach. Basic supplies like soap and dispensers aren’t promised, yet the stall’s design centers on function: sturdy grab bars, wider door swings, and floor space to maneuver. Standard details rarely warrant fanfare, but in this case, their absence stands out. The stall appears precisely where the city’s infrastructure calls for it: equidistant from park benches and curb cuts rather than hidden behind loading docks.

Using it doesn’t require reservations, but questions sometimes arise—phone ahead if details on stall measurements or proximity to specific transit exits are needed. No signage promises hourly cleaning checks or temperature control, so a quick glance for supplies and clear surfaces becomes routine. Nearby, the steady hum of foot traffic or the distant wail of a siren suggest how seamlessly it blends into daily rhythm.

The neighborhood’s glass-and-steel towers frame the surroundings, but the stall itself remains unmarked—no neon, no sandwich-board ads. Finding it relies on pre-planning rather than last-minute leaps. Use the map to confirm the exact spot before setting off.

Technical Info

Machine ID /g/11x8pt8yb_
Feature ID 0x89c2599917b17001:0xfc07cd0e840b1d64
Created 28 May 2026
Updated 06 Jul 2026

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