David, 69, international businessman, chose the WashPod temporary disabled wetroom within 3 months of his Motor Neurone Disease diagnosis and installed it into his Grade II listed property a week after placing the order.
Everyone knows how difficult it is to secure the perfect rental property in this competitive market. But if you’re doing it for someone who’s disabled, it is immediately so much harder. How many rental properties feature disabled adaptations such as a wetroom for example? A WashPod interim disabled wetroom can significantly open up the number […]
This week Dignity Access installed an Internal Compact WashPod as a temporary disabled wetroom for someone with Motor Neurone Disease in the bedroom of a remote, Grade 2 listed house. There are lots of restrictions on listed buildings and those in conservation areas which can pose problems when it comes to alterations. A Grade 2 […]
Dignity Access and the WashPod range of modular, temporary, disabled wetrooms were winners again this year at the Occupational Therapy Excellence Awards in Birmingham last week (20th June, 2025).
Dignity Access has appointed Elliot Sayers as its new National Sales Manager - a newly established role that marks a significant step in the Company’s continued growth and success.
Cumberland Council has bought 4 WashPod temporary disabled wet rooms from Dignity Access, using funding awarded by the local Health & Wellbeing Board for hospital discharge. It has set up the Cumberland Home Improvement Agency to help with disabled aids and adaptations in the home and it will also help administer the deployment of the WashPods.
Here are our experiences of various Local Authority funding routes that have been used to buy WashPods to help others navigate their way through the complexities of the disability grants available to help with adaptations