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Sensory Room Design

Accessibility

Accessibility statement

We design sensory rooms for people whose access needs sit at the heart of every brief, so it matters to us that this website is usable too. We want everyone who visits to be able to read what we do, understand what they receive, and reach us without barriers.

Last reviewed: June 2026

The standard we work to

We aim to meet the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 at level AA, the standard widely used across UK public services. We build the site with semantic, well-structured HTML, a clear visual hierarchy and generous, calm typography, and we review new pages against these guidelines as part of our normal work. Accessibility is something we keep improving rather than treat as finished.

What we have done

These are some of the specific measures in place across the site today.

Keyboard and skip link

Every page opens with a skip-to-content link, and the site can be navigated and operated with a keyboard alone. Interactive elements show a clear, visible focus outline.

Reduced motion respected

We keep movement on the site restrained, and where you ask your device for reduced motion the site honours it, near-removing animation, transitions and smooth scrolling.

Readable contrast and text

We design for a comfortable colour contrast between text and background, use real, resizable text rather than text baked into images, and set the page language so screen readers pronounce it correctly.

Structure and labels

Pages use proper headings and landmarks, links describe where they go, images that carry meaning have alternative text, and forms have labelled fields you can complete in a logical order.

Nothing gated behind cookies

Analytics cookies load only if you accept them, and declining them does not affect your ability to read the site or send an enquiry.

Where we know there is more to do

We test as we build, but no site is ever perfect for everyone. Our portfolio and design visuals are rich images, and while we describe them in the surrounding text and in alternative text, a render can never carry the full feeling of a space the way the text around it can. If any image, page or form is hard for you to use, we would rather hear about it than have you struggle, and we will fix it.


Tell us about a problem

If you come across anything on this site that is difficult to read, navigate or use, or you need information from us in a different format, please get in touch. Email hello@sensoryroomdesign.com, tell us the page and what you found, and we will respond and put it right as quickly as we can.