Anyone in a home, school, hospital, hotel or other building where ADA accessibility is a necessity will find that the bathroom can pose several problems. Primary is that it can be very hard to enter a shower stall in a wheelchair, because edges are often used around the shower pan in order to keep the water from flowing out of the shower and onto the rest of the bathroom floor. There is, however, an elegant solution to this common problem for those designing a new bathroom or anyone who is planning a tub to shower conversion, and that is to utilize trench drain systems in the bathroom. A trench shower drain keeps the water inside the shower stall, yet gives you a valuable barrier-free shower that anyone can use.
The Practical Linear Drain
A linear drain, also known as a shower trough drain, is rectangular and long in shape. It snugly fits into a trench that is put into the shower area and into which the trench shower drain is placed, with the final result being a drain that is flush with the finished floor in the shower pan. As with any shower floor drain, the trench drain systems require that the shower floor be sloped toward the drain so that the water flows into it. Because the drain is flush with the surrounding flooring, it works perfectly as a roll-in shower for a wheelchair.
In this article Jonathon Blocker writes about
trench drain systems and
tub to shower conversion
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Source: http://jonathanblocker.articlealley.com/ada-functionality-and-style-with-trench-drain-systems-2129286.html