metaeditorialplanningaccessibilitydata
How does SplashPadHub assign accessibility tags or notes?
Quick answer
Carefully, and usually field by field. Accessibility claims come from operator descriptions, imagery, maps, documented amenities, and sometimes direct correction from people who know the site. If we cannot support a claim like wheelchair-friendly entry or adult changing space, we avoid guessing.
Accessibility information is both valuable and easy to overstate, so SplashPadHub handles it cautiously. A listing may note features such as paved approach, shade, nearby accessible restroom, wheelchair-friendly surface transitions, quiet seating, or other relevant details when the evidence supports them. That evidence can come from official amenity pages, park maps, photos, planning documents, or informed corrections from operators or visitors. We try to describe concrete conditions rather than collapsing everything into a vague universal-access label. A splash pad can be easier for one user group and still incomplete for another. If the evidence is thin, we prefer silence or uncertainty over an optimistic accessibility claim that sends a family into a bad experience. Precision matters more than flattery in this part of the directory.