Modern residential building entrance with accessible ramp and wide corridors in Santiago Chile
OGUC Compliance Consulting · Chile

Accessible Buildings,
Achievable Compliance

We evaluate existing residential buildings against Chile's OGUC accessibility standards and deliver a phased adaptation plan your building committee can implement using the common expenses budget — no full structural renovation required.

Accessibility consultant reviewing architectural plans at a residential building in Chile
OGUC Certified Methodology

We Make Accessibility Compliance Practical and Phased

Most residential buildings in Chile were constructed before current OGUC accessibility requirements came into force. Bringing them into full compliance sounds daunting — but it doesn't have to mean tearing down walls or emptying the reserve fund.

Our consultancy specializes exclusively in existing residential buildings. We conduct a structured on-site assessment, identify every gap against the applicable OGUC articles, and produce a prioritized action plan organized by urgency and cost — so your committee can act step by step, budget period by budget period.

Structured On-Site Audit

We visit your building and systematically document every element: ramps, corridor widths, elevator dimensions, signage, shared bathrooms, and parking areas.

Prioritized Action Plan

Every finding is ranked by urgency and estimated cost, giving your committee a clear roadmap to work through over multiple budget cycles.

Designed for Common Expenses

Our plans are structured around realistic budget ranges compatible with typical building common expense funds — not one-time capital expenditures.

What We Assess

Our evaluation covers every element that OGUC addresses for residential common areas — assessed systematically, reported clearly.

Corridor Widths & Doorways

Every common corridor and doorway is measured against the minimum clear-width standards required for wheelchair and mobility-aid passage.

Elevators & Vertical Access

Elevator cab dimensions, door widths, control panel heights, and braille signage are evaluated for compliance with accessibility standards.

Signage & Wayfinding

We review visual and tactile signage throughout common areas, checking contrast ratios, mounting heights, and braille compliance.

Shared Bathrooms

Common-area bathrooms are evaluated for turning radius, grab bar placement, fixture heights, and door clearance — all per OGUC specifications.

Accessible Parking

We verify the presence, dimensions, marking, and proximity to building entrances of accessible parking spaces as required by regulation.

Our Four-Step Process

From first contact to a ready-to-execute action plan — here's exactly what happens at each stage of our engagement.

01

Initial Briefing

We gather basic building information — year of construction, number of floors, existing modifications — and schedule the on-site visit.

02

On-Site Audit

Our team conducts a detailed physical inspection of all common areas, measuring, photographing, and documenting every relevant element.

03

Gap Analysis

Each finding is cross-referenced against the applicable OGUC articles. We classify gaps by severity: critical, moderate, or minor.

04

Adaptation Plan

You receive a written report with every intervention ranked by priority and estimated cost, structured for phased execution over budget cycles.

Does Your Building Know Where It Stands?

An accessibility gap assessment is the first step toward compliance. We provide a clear picture of what needs attention and in what order — so your committee can plan with confidence.

Schedule an Assessment

What Building Committees Need to Know

OGUC & Accessibility Law

Chile's General Urban Planning and Construction Ordinance (OGUC) establishes specific standards for accessibility in residential buildings. Law 20.422 reinforces the right to universal access. Understanding which articles apply to your building is the starting point of any compliance effort.

Phased Implementation

Full compliance doesn't need to happen overnight. A well-structured adaptation plan allows committees to address the most critical items first — those affecting safety and basic access — while scheduling lower-priority improvements for subsequent budget periods.

Working with Common Expenses

Accessibility improvements can often be funded through the regular common expenses budget when planned in stages. Our reports include cost estimates that help committees determine which interventions fit within existing monthly budgets and which may require special assessments.

Prioritization by Risk

Not all accessibility gaps carry the same weight. A missing accessible parking space differs significantly from a ramp that creates a fall hazard. Our methodology classifies every finding by its impact on safety and legal exposure, helping committees focus resources where they matter most.

Documentation for Assemblies

Our written reports are structured to be presented directly to building assemblies. They explain findings in plain language, provide visual documentation, and outline the rationale behind each recommended intervention — making it easier to reach consensus and approve budgets.

Focused on Existing Buildings

Our consultancy works exclusively with existing residential buildings — condominiums, apartment complexes, and residential towers that were built before current accessibility standards and now need to adapt without a full structural renovation.

We understand the particular constraints of this context: structural limitations, budget realities, and the collective decision-making process of building committees. Our methodology is designed around these realities, not around ideal new-construction scenarios.

Condominiums
Apartment Towers
Residential Complexes
Mixed-Use Buildings
Pre-2010 Construction
Multi-Floor Buildings
Exterior view of a mid-rise residential condominium building in Santiago Chile

Transparent About How We Work

We believe committees make better decisions when they understand the process behind the recommendations they receive. Here's exactly how our assessment methodology works, from the moment we arrive at your building.

Physical Measurement

We use calibrated measuring tools to record exact dimensions of every element — ramp slopes to the nearest degree, corridor widths to the nearest centimeter.

Photographic Documentation

Every finding is photographed with contextual framing. Photos are included in the final report so committee members can see exactly what was observed.

OGUC Cross-Reference

Each measured element is compared against the specific OGUC article that governs it. We cite the exact regulatory text so committees understand the legal basis for each finding.

Cost & Priority Ranking

We assign each intervention a priority level and a cost range based on typical contractor rates in the Santiago metropolitan area, giving committees realistic planning data.

Written Report Delivery

The final report is delivered as a structured PDF document, formatted for presentation at building assemblies and suitable for inclusion in committee records.

Accessibility consultant measuring corridor width with measuring tape during building inspection
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