Reimagining Mental Health across the Lifespan through Sensory Integration

Sensory Project USA brings occupational science, lived experience, and creative design together to make regulation tools accessible beyond childhood worldwide.

From Sensory Ladders USA training to customized environments, we partner with communities, workplaces, and families to build sensory-friendly cultures.

A meticulously arranged Sensory Ladder chart printed on sturdy matte cardstock, clipped to a brushed metal clipboard that rests on a smooth maple desk. Colored rungs in a calm palette of blues and greens illustrate graded activity levels, with small, icon-based representations of movement, pressure, and calming tasks. Beside the chart lie a slim mechanical pencil, a small stack of sticky notes, and a weighted beanbag in deep navy fabric. Soft afternoon light enters from the left, creating gentle shadows that add depth without visual noise. Photographed from a slightly elevated angle with shallow depth of field focusing on the ladder, the image has a clean, clinical-yet-inviting aesthetic suited to professional education materials.

Services

We offer consultation, staff training, and program design focused on sensory integration for adolescents, adults, and older adults, aligning everyday routines, spaces, and activities with nervous system needs so people can participate, work, and connect more comfortably.

Events

Workshop

Hands-on introduction to Sensory Ladders for adults, teens, and therapists, blending research, movement, and practical regulation tools.

modern office man with headphones and plant

Webinar

Live online session exploring workplace sensory integration, with strategies for managers, educators, and clinicians to support neurodiverse adults.

Insights

Reviews

A modern educational display board mounted on a matte white wall, showing a large, colorful but refined diagram of the human sensory systems, including vestibular, proprioceptive, tactile, visual, and auditory pathways. Around the diagram, slim shelves hold transparent containers with labeled sensory objects: smooth river stones, small resistance bands, weighted balls, and textured spheres in muted teal, slate, and sand tones. Diffused overhead lighting creates a bright yet non-glare environment, highlighting the clarity of the graphics. Captured straight-on with a centered composition and photographic realism, the scene feels like a professional training space, conveying that sensory integration is complex, lifelong, and grounded in science.

Aya Nakamura

Sensory Ladders gave our adult clients language for their regulation needs and practical steps that respected autonomy, culture, and dignity.

A meticulously arranged Sensory Ladder chart printed on sturdy matte cardstock, clipped to a brushed metal clipboard that rests on a smooth maple desk. Colored rungs in a calm palette of blues and greens illustrate graded activity levels, with small, icon-based representations of movement, pressure, and calming tasks. Beside the chart lie a slim mechanical pencil, a small stack of sticky notes, and a weighted beanbag in deep navy fabric. Soft afternoon light enters from the left, creating gentle shadows that add depth without visual noise. Photographed from a slightly elevated angle with shallow depth of field focusing on the ladder, the image has a clean, clinical-yet-inviting aesthetic suited to professional education materials.

Mateo García

After the training, our staff finally understood sensory overload in the workplace and could adjust lighting, sound, and expectations proactively.

Visit us

United States

Hours

Monday to Friday, online

Phone

+44

photo of people using gadgets
Photo by fauxels on Pexels.com

Newsletter

Monthly updates on sensory tools, trainings, and research highlights.