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John's Accessible Group Trip to Australia

Wheelchair Travel Newsletter: Accessible Australia, “Man Overboard!” and Climbing a Bridge

Posted on February 14, 2026February 14, 2026 by Chillie Falls

Brisbane’s wheelchair accessible bridge climb is a world-first, and Sydney shines on the first Wheelchair Travel Group Trip Down Under.

Written by John Morris, WheelchairTravel.org, February 12, 2026

Hey, everyone!

Last week, I traveled from the United States to Australia to prepare for the first-ever Wheelchair Travel Group Trip in Australia (which is now underway!). I have had the pleasure of welcoming a fantastic group of travelers who hail from across the USA, and we are enjoying the warm summer weather Down Under.

Prior to my travelers’ arrival, I spent some time in Brisbane, where I had the opportunity to test a first-of-its-kind accessible attraction — an experience that landed me on the local news in Queensland! More on that in a bit, but first, some Sydney drama.

Man Overboard on a Scenic Harbour Cruise

The itinerary for the Wheelchair Accessible Group Trip to Sydney is filled with exceptional experiences, from a private tour of the iconic Sydney Opera House to a stroll along the scenic walkway in a Blue Mountains rainforest.

John pictured with a group of wheelchair users and their companions in front of a sightseeing cruise ship in Sydney's King Street Wharf.

Yesterday, I took the group on a sunset dinner cruise, which departed Sydney’s Darling Harbour and took us to Circular Quay and sights like the Opera House, Harbour Bridge and Royal Botanic Garden.

During our journey, in an unexpected moment, the Captain announced that a passenger had gone overboard. The members of my group were all accounted for — enjoying a three-course dinner at our table next to the ship’s large sightseeing windows. We later learned that the passenger in question was a teenager, who appeared to have jumped intentionally from the ship’s aft deck to impress his friends (they were gathered for a birthday celebration).

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Wheelchair Accessible Bridge Climb in Brisbane

I recently met John Sharpe, an Australian visionary and adventure experience designer who hopes to make Brisbane the world’s top accessible urban adventure destination before the city hosts the 2032 Olympic Games. Sharpe has been involved in a long list of innovative projects — I got to try two of his latest accessible adventures during my time in Brisbane last week.

John pictured with two men outside of adventure climb offices.

Story Bridge, the longest steel cantilever bridge in Australia, crosses the Brisbane River and connects downtown with the Kangaroo Point neighborhood. Constructed in 1935, it is an iconic fixture in the Brisbane skyline.

For the past 20 years, Story Bridge Adventure Climb has welcomed nondisabled adventure-seekers on thrilling climbs to the top of the bridge. Recently, John Sharpe worked with the organization to make that climb accessible. He and a variety of partners developed an accessible route using a specially-designed motorized stair climber wheelchair. The Story Bridge Adventure Climb is now the world’s first and only wheelchair accessible bridge climb, and I was excited to try it out.

Accompanying me on my climb was a crew from 7 News Brisbane, who documented my journey to the top of Story Bridge. Watch their report on this incredible attraction here:

The experience of being interviewed by a television news crew while seated on the top of an Australian bridge in a wheelchair was surreal — how could I have ever imagined such an experience to be possible? Much of what I told the reporter was cut (that’s typical of news interviews), but you can see more of my experience in this Instagram reel:https://www.instagram.com/reel/DUaXblLgcBQ/embed/captioned/?cr=1&v=14&wp=675&rd=https%3A%2F%2Fwheelchairtravel.org&rp=%2Fnewsletter-accessible-australia-man-overboard-climbing-story-bridge%2F%3Fref%3Dwheelchair-travel-newsletter%26attribution_id%3D69898ab9d6a5f30001a61420%26attribution_type%3Dpost#%7B%22ci%22%3A0%2C%22os%22%3A1496.2000000029802%2C%22ls%22%3A807%2C%22le%22%3A1422.4000000059605%7D

What excites me most is not my own experience, but the fact that this attraction pushes a new boundary in the accessibility frontier. Why shouldn’t bridge climbs be wheelchair accessible? And, now that Brisbane has shown it is possible, which destinations will follow? The Story Bridge Adventure Climb is open and accessible to the disability community, and I hope that travelers like you will experience it for yourself!

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