HostGPO member and founder and CEO of Becoming RentABLE, Lorraine Woodward, is redefining the way we think about short term rentals. She and two of her immediate family members face mobility constraints due to muscular dystrophy, so she has made it her mission to ensure that everyone has a chance to rent unique accessible vacation rentals regardless of their physical abilities.
On their website, Becoming RentABLE gives a clear definition of what a truly accessible property entails: “To have an accessible property means that there are no barriers to entry for anyone; an elderly relative, a family member with a physical disability or a friend who has been temporarily disabled.”
Prospective guests can search a database of already certified properties, and they can filter for specific features based on the group’s needs, such as 36” door width, bathrooms with elevated lifts/toilets, hard surface driveways, shower benches, adjustable beds, wheel under sinks, front-loading washers/dryers, and zero threshold doors.
Installing a wheelchair ramp is a fantastic way to make your rental more accessible, but accessibility goes well beyond getting into the front door. For example, sinks with space underneath for wheelchairs, stoves, and wheel-in showers make vacations for someone in a wheelchair much more convenient. Even lowering the hanging racks in closets goes a long way.
There’s also opportunities to accommodate people with other disabilities. People with muscular dystrophy, for example, often have extreme muscle fatigue and weakness, making it difficult to lift certain everyday objects, like a glass serving bowl or a large coffee mug. With this in mind, something as simple as providing plastic bowls and to-go paper coffee cups can make your short term rental that much more accessible to everyone.
In Becoming RentABLE’s latest project, Little Yellow House, the industry’s first fully accessible home, designers painted the light switch and outlet wall plates blue for people with vision impairments to see them better against a white wall. They’ve also installed them lower on the wall for wheelchair ease of access.
Beyond the amazing work at Becoming RentABLE, industry leaders are recognizing the need for making living and vacation spaces more accessible to all. Pottery Barn recently debuted 150 pieces of furniture for people with disabilities, which can be accessed by clicking on “Accessible Home” on their main webpage.
Now, you can fully furnish an accessible home through Pottery Barn with beautiful items like the Irving Lift Chair and a Pivot Mirror, which tilts down so guests in wheelchairs can utilize it easily.
With Lorraine’s assistance and expertise, we’ve put together a short list of items from our HostGPO vendors that will help make your rental enjoyable and accessible for all travelers and adventure seekers. These items are a great step in the right direction for opening your short term rental doors to everyone. (Stay tuned for a more exhaustive list in the future!)
West Elm
Pottery Barn
William Sonoma
Ace
Rejuvenation
Pottery Barn Teen/Kids
Public Goods
Standard Textile
Becoming RentABLE has a hand in certifying thousands of short term rentals across the US for wheelchairs, walkers, hearing and vision impairments, and autism/intellectual or developmental disabilities (IDD). And this is just the beginning.
Thanks to dedicated trailblazers like Lorraine and Pottery Barn, people are becoming more aware of how to better accommodate people of all abilities, and the travel industry is becoming a more inclusive space.
HostGPO member and founder and CEO of Becoming RentABLE, Lorraine Woodward, is redefining the way we think about short term rentals. She and two of her immediate family members face mobility constraints due to muscular dystrophy, so she has made it her mission to ensure that everyone has a chance to rent unique accessible vacation rentals regardless of their physical abilities.
On their website, Becoming RentABLE gives a clear definition of what a truly accessible property entails: “To have an accessible property means that there are no barriers to entry for anyone; an elderly relative, a family member with a physical disability or a friend who has been temporarily disabled.”
Prospective guests can search a database of already certified properties, and they can filter for specific features based on the group’s needs, such as 36” door width, bathrooms with elevated lifts/toilets, hard surface driveways, shower benches, adjustable beds, wheel under sinks, front-loading washers/dryers, and zero threshold doors.
Installing a wheelchair ramp is a fantastic way to make your rental more accessible, but accessibility goes well beyond getting into the front door. For example, sinks with space underneath for wheelchairs, stoves, and wheel-in showers make vacations for someone in a wheelchair much more convenient. Even lowering the hanging racks in closets goes a long way.
There’s also opportunities to accommodate people with other disabilities. People with muscular dystrophy, for example, often have extreme muscle fatigue and weakness, making it difficult to lift certain everyday objects, like a glass serving bowl or a large coffee mug. With this in mind, something as simple as providing plastic bowls and to-go paper coffee cups can make your short term rental that much more accessible to everyone.
In Becoming RentABLE’s latest project, Little Yellow House, the industry’s first fully accessible home, designers painted the light switch and outlet wall plates blue for people with vision impairments to see them better against a white wall. They’ve also installed them lower on the wall for wheelchair ease of access.
Beyond the amazing work at Becoming RentABLE, industry leaders are recognizing the need for making living and vacation spaces more accessible to all. Pottery Barn recently debuted 150 pieces of furniture for people with disabilities, which can be accessed by clicking on “Accessible Home” on their main webpage.
Now, you can fully furnish an accessible home through Pottery Barn with beautiful items like the Irving Lift Chair and a Pivot Mirror, which tilts down so guests in wheelchairs can utilize it easily.
With Lorraine’s assistance and expertise, we’ve put together a short list of items from our HostGPO vendors that will help make your rental enjoyable and accessible for all travelers and adventure seekers. These items are a great step in the right direction for opening your short term rental doors to everyone. (Stay tuned for a more exhaustive list in the future!)
West Elm
Pottery Barn
William Sonoma
Ace
Rejuvenation
Pottery Barn Teen/Kids
Public Goods
Standard Textile
Becoming RentABLE has a hand in certifying thousands of short term rentals across the US for wheelchairs, walkers, hearing and vision impairments, and autism/intellectual or developmental disabilities (IDD). And this is just the beginning.
Thanks to dedicated trailblazers like Lorraine and Pottery Barn, people are becoming more aware of how to better accommodate people of all abilities, and the travel industry is becoming a more inclusive space.
HostGPO member and founder and CEO of Becoming RentABLE, Lorraine Woodward, is redefining the way we think about short term rentals. She and two of her immediate family members face mobility constraints due to muscular dystrophy, so she has made it her mission to ensure that everyone has a chance to rent unique accessible vacation rentals regardless of their physical abilities.
On their website, Becoming RentABLE gives a clear definition of what a truly accessible property entails: “To have an accessible property means that there are no barriers to entry for anyone; an elderly relative, a family member with a physical disability or a friend who has been temporarily disabled.”
Prospective guests can search a database of already certified properties, and they can filter for specific features based on the group’s needs, such as 36” door width, bathrooms with elevated lifts/toilets, hard surface driveways, shower benches, adjustable beds, wheel under sinks, front-loading washers/dryers, and zero threshold doors.
Installing a wheelchair ramp is a fantastic way to make your rental more accessible, but accessibility goes well beyond getting into the front door. For example, sinks with space underneath for wheelchairs, stoves, and wheel-in showers make vacations for someone in a wheelchair much more convenient. Even lowering the hanging racks in closets goes a long way.
There’s also opportunities to accommodate people with other disabilities. People with muscular dystrophy, for example, often have extreme muscle fatigue and weakness, making it difficult to lift certain everyday objects, like a glass serving bowl or a large coffee mug. With this in mind, something as simple as providing plastic bowls and to-go paper coffee cups can make your short term rental that much more accessible to everyone.
In Becoming RentABLE’s latest project, Little Yellow House, the industry’s first fully accessible home, designers painted the light switch and outlet wall plates blue for people with vision impairments to see them better against a white wall. They’ve also installed them lower on the wall for wheelchair ease of access.
Beyond the amazing work at Becoming RentABLE, industry leaders are recognizing the need for making living and vacation spaces more accessible to all. Pottery Barn recently debuted 150 pieces of furniture for people with disabilities, which can be accessed by clicking on “Accessible Home” on their main webpage.
Now, you can fully furnish an accessible home through Pottery Barn with beautiful items like the Irving Lift Chair and a Pivot Mirror, which tilts down so guests in wheelchairs can utilize it easily.
With Lorraine’s assistance and expertise, we’ve put together a short list of items from our HostGPO vendors that will help make your rental enjoyable and accessible for all travelers and adventure seekers. These items are a great step in the right direction for opening your short term rental doors to everyone. (Stay tuned for a more exhaustive list in the future!)
West Elm
Pottery Barn
William Sonoma
Ace
Rejuvenation
Pottery Barn Teen/Kids
Public Goods
Standard Textile
Becoming RentABLE has a hand in certifying thousands of short term rentals across the US for wheelchairs, walkers, hearing and vision impairments, and autism/intellectual or developmental disabilities (IDD). And this is just the beginning.
Thanks to dedicated trailblazers like Lorraine and Pottery Barn, people are becoming more aware of how to better accommodate people of all abilities, and the travel industry is becoming a more inclusive space.