
Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved
About
Remarcation is a public framework and design practice for disability-led design education. Remarcation combines open-source teaching resources, participatory mapping of access in public spaces, and community workshops that bring designers and disabled community members together to reimagine access.
Work & Research

Access Consulting
Ruth Asawa: A Retrospective, MoMA, 2026

Art Direction
ON DISPLAY BAC, 2025

Lecture
Annum Architects, 2025

New Venture Competition Finalist
Harvard Business School, 2025

Social Innovation & Change Initiative Fellowship
Harvard Kennedy School, 2024-25

Research
Harvard Graduate School of Design, 2024
The Framework
TENET 1
No space is, has been, or ever will be accessible to all people.
Building designers should understand who they include and exclude and be held accountable.
TENET 2
The built world has, and always will have, a hierarchy of accessibility for different users.
We must prioritize access decisions based on levels of need.
TENET 3
There is no objectivity in the way people experience space.
Giving users empirical measurements of environments allows for personalization of spatial experience.

Founder
Hi! I'm Hannah Wong, the founder of Remarcation.
Remarcation was born from my thesis at Harvard's Graduate School of Design (GSD) where I was the first legally blind student to attend and graduate. After receiving a fellowship from Harvard Kennedy School and placing as a finalist in the New Venture Competition at Harvard Business School, I developed Remarcation into both an access practice as well as a social change venture.
In addition to my work with Remarcation, I am adjunct faculty at the Boston Architectural College (BAC) teaching inclusive design. I am based in Boston with my partner and three cats.

Hannah is an Asian-American woman with albinism, with wavy hair, usually wearing high heels.
© 2026 Remarcation. Content licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0.



Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved

Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved

Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved

Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved

Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved
Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved
About
Remarcation is a public framework and design practice for disability-led design education. Remarcation combines open-source teaching resources, participatory mapping of access in public spaces, and community workshops that bring designers and disabled community members together to reimagine access.


Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved

Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved

Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved

Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved

Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved
Accessible doesn't mean the same thing to everyone.
Remarcation is a framework for mapping public space using the disabled perspective giving users autonomy through information justice.
Get Involved
About
Remarcation is a public framework and design practice for disability-led design education. Remarcation combines open-source teaching resources, participatory mapping of access in public spaces, and community workshops that bring designers and disabled community members together to reimagine access.
About
Remarcation is a public framework and design practice for disability-led design education. Remarcation combines open-source teaching resources, participatory mapping of access in public spaces, and community workshops that bring designers and disabled community members together to reimagine access.

Founder
Hi! I'm Hannah Wong, the founder of Remarcation.
Remarcation was born from my thesis at Harvard's Graduate School of Design (GSD) where I was the first legally blind student to attend and graduate. After receiving a fellowship from Harvard Kennedy School and placing as a finalist in the New Venture Competition at Harvard Business School, I developed Remarcation into both an access practice as well as a social change venture.
In addition to my work with Remarcation, I am adjunct faculty at the Boston Architectural College (BAC) teaching inclusive design. I am based in Boston with my partner and three cats.

Hannah is an Asian-American woman with albinism, with wavy hair, usually wearing high heels.

Founder
Hi! I'm Hannah Wong, the founder of Remarcation.
Remarcation was born from my thesis at Harvard's Graduate School of Design (GSD) where I was the first legally blind student to attend and graduate. After receiving a fellowship from Harvard Kennedy School and placing as a finalist in the New Venture Competition at Harvard Business School, I developed Remarcation into both an access practice as well as a social change venture.
In addition to my work with Remarcation, I am adjunct faculty at the Boston Architectural College (BAC) teaching inclusive design. I am based in Boston with my partner and three cats.

Hannah is an Asian-American woman with albinism, with wavy hair, usually wearing high heels.
The Framework
TENET 1
No space is, has been, or ever will be accessible to all people.
Building designers should understand who they include and exclude and be held accountable.
TENET 2
The built world has, and always will have, a hierarchy of accessibility for different users.
We must prioritize access needs based on levels of need.
TENET 2
There is no objectivity in the way people experience space.
Giving users empirical measurements of environments allows for personalization of spatial experience.
The Framework
TENET 1
No space is, has been, or ever will be accessible to all people.
Building designers should understand who they include and exclude and be held accountable.
TENET 2
The built world has, and always will have, a hierarchy of accessibility for different users.
We must prioritize access decisions based on levels of need.
TENET 3
There is no objectivity in the way people experience space.
Giving users empirical measurements of environments allows for personalization of spatial experience.
Work & Research


Access Consulting
Ruth Asawa: A Retrospective, MoMA, 2026


Art Direction
ON DISPLAY BAC, 2025


Lecture
Annum Architects, 2025


New Venture Competition Finalist
Harvard Business School, 2025


Social Innovation & Change Initiative Fellowship
Harvard Kennedy School, 2024-25


Research
Harvard Graduate School of Design, 2024
© 2026 Remarcation. Content licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0.
