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Accessible Color Schemes for Architecture Presentations

Design accessible color schemes for architecture presentation boards and client deliverables that work for viewers with color vision deficiency.

ArchitectureAccessibilityPresentationsWCAG
Key points
Presentation boards reviewed by building committees must pass contrast checks regardless of audience.
Stone-and-teal pairings maintain clear differentiation under the most common color vision deficiency types.
Accessible architecture palettes reduce reliance on color alone by pairing hue shifts with lightness changes.

Presentation boards face unpredictable viewing conditions

Architecture presentation boards are reviewed by planning committees, client stakeholders, and public audiences — groups where roughly 8% of male viewers have some form of color vision deficiency. If your floor plan legends, site analysis diagrams, or material call-outs rely on hue differences alone, a meaningful portion of your audience will miss critical distinctions. Pair every color-coded element with a secondary differentiator: pattern fills, labels, or significant lightness contrast. The Stone and Teal collection is useful because its tones naturally separate on the lightness axis, not just in hue.

Test your diagrams under deuteranopia and protanopia simulation

The two most common color vision deficiencies — deuteranopia and protanopia — collapse red-green distinctions. This directly affects common architecture conventions like red for demolition, green for new construction, and amber for temporary works. Before finalizing any presentation, run your diagrams through the WCAG Auditor to verify that every meaningful color pair maintains at least a 3:1 contrast ratio under simulated deficiency conditions. This small step prevents miscommunication during reviews where the stakes include permit approval and construction timelines.

Build a firm-wide accessible template system

Individual project teams should not have to solve accessibility from scratch on every proposal. Create a firm-wide template that bakes accessible color assignments into your standard legend, diagram, and call-out styles. Define a fixed set of six to eight colors that pass contrast checks against both light and dark backgrounds, then lock them into your InDesign, PowerPoint, and Figma libraries. The Brand Starter Kit accelerates this by providing role-based color groupings that already account for contrast pairing, reducing the template setup to a configuration task rather than a design problem.

Practical next step

Move from the guide into a concrete palette lane

Guides explain the use case. Collections prove the taste. Packs handle the export and implementation layer.

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