Bridging the Gap

Meet the entrepreneur making Iceland more accessible

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Meet the entrepreneur making Iceland more accessible

Late one night in July 2020 in Reykjavik, where the sun never fully sets in summer, Haraldur (Halli) Thorleifsson was wandering around the city’s main shopping street with his wife and two kids. It was shortly after they had moved from the United States back to his home country; they were jet-lagged and couldn’t sleep.

During their walk, his three-year-old son was thirsty and wanted a drink from the corner store. But Thorleifsson soon discovered he couldn’t help with the simple request: A 20-centimetre step blocked his access to the store.

The barrier was all too familiar. Born with muscular dystrophy, which causes progressive weakness and muscle loss, Thorleifsson, now 46, has been using a wheelchair since age 25. As he waited outside the shop for his wife and children, he recalls, “I thought about how strange it is that we separate families in this way. I thought about all the times I wasn’t able to join my friends at restaurants and stores that are inaccessible.”

Living all over the world as a creative director and digital designer, Thorleifsson had witnessed first-hand how different cities consider and plan for accessibility, from ramps and sidewalks to public transportation.

Having sold his digital creative agency, Ueno, to Twitter (now X), Thorleifsson now had the means to make a difference in his home city. So he embarked on a project to make Iceland wheelchair accessible, one ramp at a time.

Ramp Up Reykjavik launched as a non-profit in 2021 with a goal to build 100 ramps, mostly in the city’s downtown, within a year. Unlike portable and temporary solutions in other cities, these ramps are permanent structures that match the aesthetic of the buildings, making them appear as if they’ve always been there.

It’s a design detail that helps provide a sense of inclusivity: These ramps, and those who need to use them, belong. Thorleifsson says it was important to...

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