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Dave Sirotaleft a comment
My father has FSHD, a form of muscular dystrophy. Taking him out to dinner shouldn't require three phone calls and a prayer. But it does. Every time. Google Maps has a wheelchair accessibility checkbox. It's wrong more often than it's right. Yelp doesn't have one at all. Nobody does this well because nobody has the data. So I built it. ROLLIN scores restaurants, bars, and cafes on a 0-100 scale...

Rollin Concierge Stop Guessing. Start Living.
ROLLIN Concierge helps wheelchair users find restaurants, bars, and cafes they can actually get into. Search any city. Filter by what you need, ramp entry, accessible restrooms, wide aisles. Ask ROLLIN
in plain English: "accessible Italian near me, no steps." An adaptive concierge with three modes learns how you move and sends smart alerts near accessible places. Community-verified data that improves with every visit. $1.99 one-time, no subscription.

Rollin Concierge Stop Guessing. Start Living.
Dave Sirotaleft a comment
Hey PH! I'm David, a solo developer in the Hudson Valley. I built ROLLIN because my family knows firsthand how stressful it is to show up at a restaurant and realize you can't get in. Google Maps says "wheelchair accessible" but that could mean anything. ROLLIN scores locations 0-100 across six real features — wheelchair entry, level entry, accessible restroom, parking, wide aisles, and...

ROLLINreal accessibility data for every restaurant
Your dinner plans shouldn't require a research project. ROLLIN scores 56,000+ restaurants and bars on real wheelchair accessibility — not just "yes/no" checkbox, but a 0-100 score across 6 features like entry, restrooms,
and parking. Covering California, New York, Florida, Massachusetts, New Jersey & Pennsylvania. Free API and MCP server for developers building
accessible apps. Know before you go. Solo Dev.

ROLLINreal accessibility data for every restaurant
Dave Sirotastarted a discussion
Why I built ROLLIN (launching tomorrow)
My family member uses a wheelchair. Every time we go out to eat, it's the same routine — call ahead, check Google (which just says "wheelchair accessible" with zero detail), hope for the best, and sometimes turn around at the door because "accessible" meant one grab bar in the bathroom. That's broken. 5.5 million wheelchair users in the US deal with this every day. So I built ROLLIN. It scores...
