Campbelltown Billabong Aquatic Centre_compliance blog
This article summarises the key accessibility requirements under AS 1428.1 – Australia’s Design for Access and Mobility standard – as they apply to speed gates and turnstiles.
AS 1428.1 doesn’t regulate speed gates as a product category. Instead, it sets the accessibility benchmarks – clear widths, paths of travel, control placement and more – that any gate or turnstile installation must meet. These benchmarks sit within a broader framework that also includes the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA), the National Construction Code (NCC/BCA), and the Disability (Access to Premises – Buildings) Standards.
AS 1428.1 specifies how to design doors, passageways and floor spaces so everyone can access and use public and private spaces. Any speed gate or turnstile installation sits within a continuous accessible path of travel, and it must not obstruct or restrict that path below the minimum dimensions.
A single-leaf door must have a minimum 850mm clear width when open at the narrowest point , letting wheelchair users travel through unobstructed.
This 850mm minimum directly affects gate and turnstile design. Although Rotech Automation’s J18, SL3 and Z58 turnstiles suit narrow spaces well, they don’t meet this threshold on their own. However, you can pair them with a single-leaf swing gate for wheelchairs to satisfy the point 3 requirement. Typically the maximum passage width of a tripod turnstile is usually 550-650mm. A wheelchair is generally at least 700mm wide, and you also need to account for clearance for the user’s hands to propel through the opening – meaning the passage width must be at least 850-900mm. Rotech’s Z23 and Z26HG Swing Gate Speed Gates customise up to 1,100mm passage width, while the DS8000 single-leaf reaches 900mm – or can also be customised into a double swing gate for extra width.
A standard narrow turnstile cannot be the only means of access. Consistent with the DDA, swing barrier gates seamlessly create DDA-compliant accessible lanes – which is why they’re widely favoured. In practice, this means:
AS 1428.1 specifies where to position controls so a wheelchair user can reach and operate them. Key requirements include:
AS 1428.1:2021 extends to the visual and operational aspects of accessibility, mandating contrasting lines and luminance contrasts across doorways and adjacent walls, to guide individuals with vision impairments safely. Gate panels, barriers, and indicator lights must provide sufficient colour contrast, so they are distinguishable by people with low vision.
Where pedestrians approach a bank of turnstiles or speed gates, TGSIs may be required to assist people with vision impairment in locating the accessible lane. TGSIs shall be installed in accordance with AS 1428.4.1.
Gates forming part of a required exit path must integrate with the fire alarm system and reliably fail-safe – opening automatically upon activation or power loss – ensuring unimpeded egress. The aggregate clear width provided must meet calculations based on occupancy load.
From 29 July 2025, Australia’s key standard for building access and mobility is AS 1428.1-2021, replacing the 2009 version in both the NCC 2022 Amendment 2 and the Disability (Access to Premises – Buildings) Standards 2010. Although the changes mainly clarify existing requirements for consistent interpretation, they also revise the clause numbering.
Requirement | AS 1428.1 Benchmark |
Minimum clear passage width | 850mm (900mm+ recommended) |
Accessible lane required | Yes - always at least one per bank |
Control/reader height | 900mm–1100mm AFF |
Luminance contrast on barriers | Required |
TGSIs approaching gates | Required per AS 1428.4.1 |
Fail-safe on power/fire | Required - gates must open |
Important note: AS 1428.1 is a building design standard – it sets the environment in which gates sit. For specific product selection and compliance sign-off, always engage a qualified Access Consultant and check against the current NCC and Premises Standards for your jurisdiction, as state/territory requirements can vary.
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