NCSML Receives $47,470 from Carver Trust

(Cedar Rapids, Iowa, July 30, 2020)  — The National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library has received $47,470 from the Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust to fund building improvements and new equipment that will make the NCSML more accessible to visitors with physical, visual, audio, and other disabilities.

The funds will be used for three initiatives: facilities accessibility updates; program materials; and visitor experience accommodations. For example, as part of the facilities accessibility updates, internal doors will be made automatic so that individuals in wheelchairs can more easily access public restrooms, the library, and the theater. One of the items included under program materials is the purchase of accessible art supplies so the museum may start offering targeted art workshops to groups with disabilities including long term adult care centers in the community. The NCSML will also completely redesign the Education Collection so that it will be more utilized in hands-on visitor experiences for visitors who benefit from tactile learning.

The Sleger Immigrant Home is one of the NCSML’s most popular attractions, but the narrow doorways make it impossible for anyone in a wheelchair to enter. Due to structural and historical integrity, the doors can’t be widened, so Carver Trust funds will be used to purchase a tablet that will contain a virtual 3D tour of the house.

“We sat down with people with disabilities and asked them to tell us what we could do to make them feel more welcome and safe in this community and that is how we ended up with this list of new initiatives and accommodations,” Sarah Henderson, the NCSML’s Associate Director of Lifelong Learning, said.

The Carver Trust funds also will be used to purchase noise-cancelling earmuffs for visitors on the autism spectrum, closed-captioning for live programs for those with hearing disabilities, the creation of a 3D raised map of the NCSML and audio guides for visitors with visual disabilities and folding stools for visitors with mobility disabilities.

“Our goal above anything else was to be a space that provides education for all people equally. We also understand that everyone is a different style learner,” Henderson said. “Maybe you do not have a disability but you will still benefit from an audio experience or a tactile one. These accommodations make us a better institution for all people, not just those with disabilities.”

The Carver Trust was established by Iowan Roy J. Carver, a Muscatine industrialist and philanthropist, to support biomedical and scientific research, primary, secondary and higher education, and programs addressing the educational and recreational needs of youth. The Carver Trust is one of the the largest private philanthropic foundations in the state of Iowa.

2 Comments. Leave new

  • Mary Kathryn Moravek
    August 8, 2020 6:20 PM

    But you never answered my Question. How does one get into the main entrance in a wheelchair. Try it and you won’t be able to do ot

    Reply
    • Hello Mary,
      While our garage entrance offers the easiest access to our elevator, the main entrance can be accessed via the wheelchair ramp that is adjacent to the main entrance stairs.
      Thank you

      Reply

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