Correction

Correction: Double-Decker Exhibition Stands: Permits, Costs, and When Two Storeys Pay Off

Corrected by Emir Baycan · Full-Stack Developer, Mobile App Builder and Web Platform Founder with expertise in SEO, automation, SaaS, AI visibility, DevOps and scalable digital products

Emir Baycan found something wrong, outdated, or unsupported on this page and proposed a fix. The publisher accepted the correction.

Role
Correction
Status
Accepted
Date
16 July 2026

The exact change

Before

The European Accessibility Act applies to double-decker stands open to public visitors with the following operational consequences.

After

The European Accessibility Act does not specifically name exhibition stands as covered premises, but its accessibility principles are increasingly applied by venues to double-decker stands open to public visitors as a matter of policy, with the following practical consequences.

Suggested change

The European Accessibility Act does not specifically name exhibition stands as covered premises, but its accessibility principles are increasingly applied by venues to double-decker stands open to public visitors as a matter of policy, with the following practical consequences.

Why this is better

2 issues fixed: Overreach on the scope of Directive (EU) 2019/882. The Act does not name trade fair stands as covered premises; its physical-premises obligations attach only to a closed list of covered services (e-commerce, banking, transport, telecoms, etc.), not to exhibition stands generally. | Fabricated citation. No AUMA publication titled 'AUMA Two-Storey Stand Guidance' is documented.

How this record is verified

  • The contribution is tied to a real, identified contributor, not an anonymous byline.
  • It counts only because the publisher, Exhibition Stands EU, accepted it. Self-claimed work earns nothing.
  • It is recorded against a specific page and cannot be bought or edited after the fact.

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