Wisconsin Code § 66.0909

Curb ramping
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) The standard for construction
of curbs and sidewalks on each side of a city or village street, or a
connecting highway or town road for which curbs and sidewalks
have been prescribed by the governing body of the town, city or
village having jurisdiction, shall include curb ramping providing
access to crosswalks at intersections and other designated locations. Curb ramping includes the curb opening, the ramp and that
part of the sidewalk or apron leading to and adjacent to the curb
opening. Any person constructing new curbs or sidewalks or replacing curbs or sidewalks within 5 feet of a legal crosswalk in
any city street, village street, connecting highway or town road
shall comply with the standards for curb ramping under this
section.
(3) Curb ramps shall conform to the following requirements:
(a) Curb ramping shall be of permanent construction. The
ramp shall be at least 40 inches wide. The sides of the ramp shall
slope from the sidewalk or apron elevations to the ramp elevation
with the widest portion of the side slope not less than 18 inches
nor more than 24 inches wide at the curb. The ramp slope may
not exceed one inch vertical to 12 inches horizontal from the flow
line elevation of the curb. The curb opening shall be not less than
40 inches nor more than 80 inches wide at the flow line of the
curb. The taper of the curb from the top of the curb to the flow
line of the curb at the curb opening shall be not less than 18
inches nor more than 24 inches wide. The ramp shall be bordered
on both sides and on the curb line with a 4-inch-wide yellow
stripe or with brick of a contrasting color.
(b) Curb ramping shall be in one of the following locations, to
provide access to each end of each crosswalk affected:
1. At the center of the curve of the street corner to accommodate crossing for either direction at the intersection. The entire
curb corner may not be made into a ramp, but shall provide for
standard sidewalk apron and curb on both sides of a ramp. Any
safety zone marking required by ordinance shall be provided in
the street or town road 40 inches out and parallel with the curb,
joining with the standard safety pedestrian crossing markings in
the street or town road;
2. If subd. 1. is not feasible, centered on line with the crosswalk and pedestrian traffic and containing surface texturing to indicate clearly to the sense of touch that the surface differs from
that of the sidewalk or street. The surface texturing shall consist
of linear impressions one-fourth of an inch to three-eighths of an
inch deep, oriented to provide a uniform pattern of diamond
shapes. The diamond shapes shall measure approximately 1 1/4

inches wide by 2 1/4 inches long, with the length of the diamond
shape parallel to the direction of pedestrian movement. The diamond shapes shall be spaced one-fourth of an inch to threeeighths of an inch apart. This surface texture may be achieved by
impressing and removing expanded metal regular industrial mesh
into the surface of the ramp while the concrete is in a plastic state;
or
3. If both subds. 1. and 2. are not feasible, at a suitable location as near to the crosswalk as practicable. Any safety zone
markings required by ordinance shall be provided in the street or
town road 40 inches out and parallel with the curb, joining with
the standard safety pedestrian crossing markings in the street or
town road.
(5) The district attorney, on his or her own motion or upon the
complaint of any person, may bring an action in circuit court to
enforce this section.
(6) If any person constructs a new or replacement sidewalk or
curb, other than the town, city or village with jurisdiction over the
curbs or sidewalks, the town, city or village shall inform the person of the requirements of this section. The town, city or village
may agree to construct, or bear the cost of constructing, curb
ramping required to provide access to sidewalks opposite the new
or replacement curb or sidewalk.

‹ Prev All Wisconsin sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.