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CASE STUDY · DISABILITY RESOURCE HUB

A resource hub built by someone who has actually lived it.

A hand-coded, multi-page Louisiana resource hub for the disability community — built from over thirteen years of lived experience navigating the systems, programs, and technology that make independence possible.

Type
Personal mission project
Status
Live & growing
Build
Hand-coded HTML & CSS

I built it because I needed it.

Living with a disability means spending a serious amount of time tracking down information that should already be easy to find — what waivers you qualify for, which assistive tech would actually help your situation, who to call about insurance coverage, how to even begin asking the right questions.

For someone newly injured, that information gap is overwhelming. For someone who's lived it for years, it's still exhausting. Programs exist specifically to help people with disabilities — and most people miss them because nobody tells them they exist.

AccessableWiki is the resource I wished had existed when I needed it. So I built it.

Real resources, organized for real life.

AccessableWiki is structured around the questions people actually ask — sorted both by disability type and by the kind of solution someone is looking for. Whether the visitor is trying to figure out what waiver to apply for, what smart home device would help most, or how to play video games again, there's a starting point that matches their situation.

A static site can only do so much.

A page on a website cannot replace a real conversation. So AccessableWiki includes something most resource hubs don't: free one-on-one video consultations.

Visitors can book a real video call to talk through Alexa setup, GLASSOUSE configuration, wheelchair questions, waiver applications, or just to talk to someone who has been where they are. No catch, no sales pitch, no upsell at the end.

It's the difference between a site that publishes information and a site that actually helps.

Hand-coded, on purpose.

AccessableWiki is built page-by-page in raw HTML and CSS — no off-the-shelf builder, no template marketplace, no bloated framework. That choice was deliberate.

For an audience that may include screen reader users, older users, users with cognitive load constraints, and users on slow rural connections, every kilobyte and every layout decision matters. Hand-coded means the site stays fast, accessible, and predictable — exactly what the audience needs.

It also means every page is built to do its specific job well, instead of being bent to fit someone else's template assumptions.

15+
Resource pages
5
Disability pathways
13+
Years of lived experience
$0
Cost to visitors

The people who help disabled people are paying attention.

AccessableWiki is still young, but early signal has come from the right places — therapists and providers in the disability space who plan to share it with the people they support.

"Thank you for creating this. It will be a nice resource to give people whenever they're looking for more information." — Therapists in Landon's network

That kind of validation — provider-side, before the site has been widely promoted — confirms that the gap is real, and that AccessableWiki is filling it.

Let's build something that actually matters.

Whether it's a small business site, a personal mission, or something in between — I build from scratch to fit what you need.