Visiting somewhere new should feel like a simple decision. For many people it is not. This is about removing the uncertainty that comes before the trip, so that anyone can go somewhere and know they will be able to get in, move around, and feel like they belong there.
My name is Youssef, and I started this because of something people don't often talk about. That small moment before going somewhere new when you stop and wonder: can I even get in?
For a lot of people, that thought never comes up. They check the reviews, maybe look at the menu, and they go. But for others, the process starts much earlier and looks completely different. It starts with questions. Is there a step at the entrance? Will there be somewhere to sit if I need to rest? If something goes wrong, can I get out easily? And most of the time, those questions don't have easy answers. You search, you call ahead, you ask around, and you still end up unsure. So you either take the risk and hope for the best, or you don't go at all.
Over time, that becomes the default. You stop considering certain places. You build a small, safe map of where you know you can go and you stick to it. Not because you want to, but because the alternative is too uncertain and the effort of finding out is too high.
That is what accessibility looks like in practice for a lot of people. Not dramatic barriers or obvious exclusion, but a quiet, constant friction that most people never notice because they were never on the wrong side of it.
Accessibility is still treated like an afterthought in most places. Something extra, something to add later, something that matters only to a small group. But that framing misses the point entirely. Accessibility shapes whether someone feels able to participate in ordinary life. A coffee shop, a pharmacy, a park, a job interview. These are not special occasions. They are the texture of a normal day, and right now a lot of people are navigating that texture with far less information than they deserve.
That is what this platform is for. Not trends, not design awards, not a checklist exercise. Just honest, practical information about whether a place works for you before you make the trip. Submitted by people who have been there, verified where possible, and presented without jargon.
The goal is simple. That moment of hesitation before going somewhere new, that quiet calculation of risk and uncertainty, should not have to exist. Going somewhere should feel like a decision, not a gamble. And everyone deserves to leave their home with the same basic confidence: that they were considered, that there is space for them, and that they belong there just as much as anyone else.