We are back from a great and exhausting trip. In general, I give a "thumbs up" to New York City for her accessibility. This complement really should be more for her people then the 99% curb cuts and absence of any threshold to gain access to buildings. The people are very accommodating and truly wanting to help getting through doors and around obstructions. All the city buses are accessible, having a lift or ramp that extends to the sidewalk. Neither I nor my attending partner were ever charged bus fare! I think the subways are probably not the way to go -- I've heard tales of handicapped folks having to go to the end of the line because the driver was unaware they were trapped! But the buses were great.
All the theaters charged half-price for both my wife and I. Anywhere you want to sit, they just take the seat out. The brakes on my chair weren't good enough to hold me in place in the slanted seating at one theater, so they moved me.
"SUPER SHUTTLE -- to be avoided"
My ability to assist in transfers is negligible. As such, I booked passage on a handicapped shuttle bus from the airport. This was a major snafu! They were four hours late when we arrived, and they NEVER SHOWED AT ALL when we needed to catch our outbound flight. My wife and two guys from the hotel dragged me in the back of a taxi and we made it on time. Do not rely on SuperShuttle.
In the total of 150 city blocks we traversed, two or three had no curb cut. The sidewalks by and large were smooth and easily negotiable. I felt lucky to find this level of accessibility, and have a wife who can transfer me so well. The sad thing is, I saw very few wheelchairs out and about in my travels. Seriously, I did not see 4 wheelchairs in 4 days.
I am inserting some links to photos: hobnobbing with Mike Wallace;

Pushing around Central Park;

(The site wouldn't let me put many photos in one post... so, I'LL POST AGAIN)
Edited by Captain Pike, 03 April 2007 - 08:12 PM.