Featured Projects
Reimagining Play: How Universal Design Transformed the New Utica Children’s Museum
Utica Children’s Museum | Utica, NY | 2025 | Architect: CSArch
When the Utica Children’s Museum closed its doors in 2020, it began a bold reimagining—one rooted in the belief that every child, regardless of ability or background, deserves a space to play, learn, and thrive. After years of thoughtful planning, design, and collaboration, the museum has reopened in a new home as part of Integrated Community Alternatives Network’s (ICAN) Family Resource Center. It’s more than just a new building; it’s an example of how universal design can transform spaces to allow individuals of all abilities to use them. The museum received its innovative solutions for universal design certification (isUD™) on April 29th, 2025.
Project Goals
The idea for the new museum began with ICAN’s mission to provide integrated, family-centered services in Utica. The goal was to design a space where all visitors—children, caregivers, educators, and community members—could participate equally. To achieve this, ICAN partnered with the Center for Inclusive Design and Environmental Access (IDEA Center) at the University at Buffalo, a leader in universal design. Guided by Danise Levine, architect and Assistant Director of the IDEA Center, the project team embraced the isUD™ framework—a set of goals and evidence-based solutions to make environments more usable by all.
IDEA Center's Contribution
Features include:
- Intuitive Wayfinding: Clear sightlines, legible signage, logical circulation paths, and consistent spatial cues reduce cognitive load and improve traveler confidence.
- Multisensory Considerations: Thoughtful lighting, acoustics, and spatial organization support travelers with diverse sensory processing needs, including neurodivergent individuals.
- Comfort & Body Fit: Varied seating options, generous circulation widths, and accessible amenities accommodate a broad range of body types and mobility devices.
- Integrated Inclusivity: Inclusive features are seamlessly embedded within the overall design language, reinforcing dignity and eliminating segregation.
Community Impact
The Utica Children’s Museum is not just a local success story—it’s a blueprint for other institutions around the country. By combining the IDEA Center’s universal design expertise, Hands On! Studio’s engaging exhibits, and CSArch’s architectural vision, the museum demonstrates what’s possible when inclusion is the foundation, not the afterthought.
As children stream through the new doors—exploring, building, learning, and imagining—the success of the project is clear. It’s not just a museum. It’s a place where every child can play, learn, and engage. Every family can feel supported, and every community can see what a truly inclusive future looks like.
IDEA Center's Contribution
Let us help you design for everyone.
Founded in 1984, the IDEA Center is a world-renowned leader in inclusive design, offering expert solutions that prioritize accessibility, safety, and well-being. Backed by extensive research and hands-on design experience, our multi-disciplinary team collaborates with owners, developers, architects, exhibit designers, and project teams to create environments that are not only inclusive but also innovative.
If you would like to learn more about how you can incorporate universal design into your projects, please reach out to us!
Telephone: +1.716.829.5903
E-mail: ap-idea@buffalo.edu