Cultural Accessibility: visible and invisible barriers in cultural venues
Reflections from the national course of the Foundation School of Cultural Heritage and Activities

Cultural accessibility as a systemic vision
Cultural Accessibility as a Systemic Vision
Cultural accessibility is not a set of technical requirements or a protocol to be applied to comply with regulations. It is a cultural and organizational process that affects the entire ecosystem of cultural venues: architectural spaces, modes of use, communication systems, professional skills, and interpersonal relationships.
A transformation that requires vision, awareness, and a design approach capable of embracing the complexity of human diversity.
This perspective is at the heart of the national course “Cultural Accessibility: Principles and Practices,” promoted by the Fondazione Scuola dei Beni e delle Attività Culturali as part of the Personeper – Accessibility in Cultural Venues program.
As part of this training program, Francesco Rodighiero, together with Antonella Agnoli, curated the lesson “Visible and Invisible Barriers: Understanding the Context to Define Solutions,” a module that explores in depth the obstacles — tangible and intangible — that impact the full experience of cultural sites.
Recognizing barriers beyond the obvious
In the collective imagination, museums, archives, and libraries are perceived as places naturally open to all. In reality, their accessibility is often limited by a constellation of barriers that interfere with enjoyment, orientation, understanding, and a sense of belonging.
Physical barriers constitute the first level of obstacle: steps, inadequate ramps, inadequate elevators, narrow passageways, fragmented internal routes. They don’t just affect people with mobility disabilities: they also affect those experiencing temporary fragility, such as parents with strollers, the elderly, or visitors with limited mobility.
Added to these are perceptual and sensorial barriers: orientation systems that don’t guide, insufficient lighting, difficult-to-read text, acoustically problematic environments. These difficulties impact everyone’s experience, not just those with hypo- or hypersensitivity.
Finally, technological barriers represent an increasingly relevant dimension. QR codes, inaccessible digital interfaces, content incompatible with assistive technologies, and the lack of digital literacy generate new forms of invisible exclusion.
Although evident, these barriers are often addressed in a fragmented manner, without a comprehensive strategy. Cultural accessibility, however, requires a unified, person-centered project.

The symbolic threshold of cultural places
Many obstacles are less tangible but equally impactful. Cultural places, in fact, harbor a symbolic threshold that can convey distance or a sense of inadequacy.
The language used on the panels, the complexity of the narratives, the information systems designed for a cultured or specialist audience, the room layouts that suggest who belongs there and who doesn’t: all these elements combine to define a cultural barrier that is difficult to break down.
These are subtle but decisive dynamics. They can transform a museum into a place perceived as elitist, or a library into a space that is “not for me,” despite its public mission.
The overall program of the Personeper program explores these themes in depth: https://www.fondazionescuolapatrimonio.it/offerta-formativa/personeper-accessibilita-luoghi-cultura/
Organizational barriers: what you can’t see
A significant portion of the lesson addresses systemic barriers, or invisible obstacles generated by organizational and management choices.
Limited or incompatible hours with daily life, a lack of flexible services, a lack of dedicated cultural mediation staff, inadequately trained staff in inclusive hospitality, and a misalignment between online communication and in-person experiences: these are factors that profoundly impact the visitor experience.
Cultural accessibility depends not only on spaces and technologies, but also on the quality of the processes that govern the life of a cultural institution.
Social justice and economic barriers
Accessibility is also a question of resources. The cost of transportation, educational services, workshops, or technologies can constitute a significant obstacle for many citizens.
Designing inclusively means questioning the economic sustainability of cultural experiences and imagining equitable and accessible models of enjoyment. Equity is not an abstract principle: it is a concrete design element that determines who can—and who cannot—access culture.
Relational barriers: the most fragile dimension
The most subtle, but perhaps most decisive, barriers are relational ones.
The lack of listening, the difficulty in building trust, the sense of loneliness, the lack of human support in critical moments are all elements that decisively impact access to culture.
Relationships are an essential component of the cultural project. Without relationships, no place is truly accessible. Investing in the quality of hospitality, cultural mediation, and community building means creating real conditions for participation.

Transforming spaces: appropriation, flexibility, and everyday life
The examples of European libraries analyzed during the lecture—from Copenhagen to Barcelona, from Oslo to Whitechapel—show how the most inclusive cultural spaces are those capable of adapting, transforming, and welcoming different modes of presence.
Places that allow people to pause, study, meet, observe, participate, and rest.
Spaces that do not impose posture or behavior, but offer freedom of use and the possibility of appropriation. Architectural and functional flexibility thus becomes a fundamental tool for embracing human diversity.
Accessibility as an opportunity for cultural regeneration
Conceiving cultural accessibility as a design principle means recognizing it as an opportunity for regeneration.
It is a strategic investment that allows us to rethink services, organizational models, and forms of hospitality, broadening participation and enhancing a diverse audience.
Accessibility is not a bureaucratic constraint, but a condition that enriches cultural venues, strengthens their public mission, and makes them vital hubs of contemporary communities.












