Lap Packing Barcelona Part One
On a recent trip to Barcelona I decided to do a short video log of the trip called “Lap Packing”. I’ve now edited the first part and here it is. It’s not the best quality in the world, but then I’m not a film director!
On a recent trip to Barcelona I decided to do a short video log of the trip called “Lap Packing”. I’ve now edited the first part and here it is. It’s not the best quality in the world, but then I’m not a film director!
After my blog post yesterday about the launch of accessible.travel Cape Town I am even slightly surprised myself to be able to announce the launch of accessible.travel Melbourne today!
We still have some work to do on both destination pages such as add maps and bathroom sketches but the basic information regarding a few hotels is there. Thanks to our collaborator Bill Forrester, Director of Travability and our web designer, Quim Mañas Marsiñach, of cmpst, for all their hard work.
Below: Melbourne, provided by Bill Forrester through the accessible.travel Community.

With the amazing help of Monica Guy here on the accessible.travel Community and the owner of Accessible Cape Town, we have been able to launch the accessible.travel Cape Town destination page. There’s still a lot of work for us to do in South Africa and a lot of information to collect, but now we have four hotels for you to choose from with varying levels of facilities for people with disabilities.
Below: accessible.travel Community member Scott Rains on Safari in South Africa earlier this month.

Brussels will also be launched as a destination accessible.travel early next week with another 5 hotels to choose from. Another member of the accessible.travel Community, Bill Forrester, has been collecting hotel data and information with us in Melbourne and all of this has just been sent to the accessible.travel designer to be published.
Ian Chill has also been sending us some great information about accessible hotels in Cairns as well as posting information in the accessible.travel Community Cairns Group. I’ll announce when Cairns is available with instant hotel booking here on the blog as soon as it’s ready. Another collaborator with the accessible.travel project is Hartmut Smikac and will be helping us collect information in Germany, Austria and Hungary. Again in Europe, Luis Varela from Accessible Portugal has agreed to work with us, this time in Portuguese capital, Lisbon. Luis is the latest person to agree to work with us and I’m really looking forward to working with him further.
Hartmut has also translated our audit forms into German and Loretta Jaumandreu has translated them into Spanish making it easier for us to work with local people with disabilities at destinations that speak these languages.
If you would like to get more involved with the accessible.travel project and help us collect information about hotels, attractions, museums, bars, restaurants, nightclubs and transport where you live and earn commissions for the work you do, please contact me through my profile.
Craig

The radio interview on Wisconsin Public Radio’s Here on Earth show with Scott Rains and myself is now available:
I am pleased to announce a new partnership between accessible.travel and tripwolf to support each other in our work.
Tripwolf is a social travel guide for the discerning traveler that combines professional editorial travel content with user generated content – a collection of experiences from thousands of travelers worldwide. With tripwolf, travelers can generate their own customized 10-20 page travel guide based on their individual preferences and recommendations from friends and “trip gurus.”
I have been involved with tripwolf since their launch and have always tried to provide information for travellers with disabilities on their site. I am thrilled that they are suppporting accessible.travel in order to be able to provide their own community users with useful information about travelling with a disability.
We hope to be able to cross reference the hotels that both sites use so that tripwolf users with disabilities can find reliable information about accommodation with facilities for people with disabilities and make reservations with us.
Thanks to tripwolf for their continued support and everyone involved in accessible.travel is very excited about this new partnership.
Welcome to the March 2009 issue of the Global Access News Travel E-Zine. Thanks to everyone for taking the time to write us and share your travel tips and experiences.
1. ACCESSIBLE TRAVEL
Craig Grimes, who operates the excellent www.accessiblebarcelona.com is now offering a new site, Accessible Travel, http://www.accessible.travel/ It features access information on hotels in San Francisco, as well as Paris, London, Prague and additional European cities. Grimes intends to eventually expand his site to include a host of other destinations, which will surely prove a boon to disabled travelers.
Also mentioned in Global Access News this month is our other web page AccessibleNicaragua:
4. ACCESSIBLE NICARAGUA
Craig Grimes, of Accessible Barcelona and Accessible Travel, takes on access in Nicaragua. It is always so encouraging to see new regions like Nicaragua open up to disabled travelers. At last, we can put Central America on our itineraries. Visit www.accessiblenicaragua.com
Source: GLOBAL ACCESS NEWS TRAVEL E-ZINE, VOLUME X, NUMBER 3, March 2009

Disability NOW (Greece) have posted about accessible.travel in their forum in Greek!
Όσοι από εσάς ενδιαφέρεστε κι έχετε χρόνο να του γράψετε τη γνώμη σας ή να κάνετε τις παρατηρήσεις/υποδείξεις σας, μπορείτε να επικοινωνήσετε μαζί του, στο email: craig@accessible.travel (το μήνυμά σας θα πρέπει να είναι στα Αγγλικά)
Ο Craig Grimes είναι παραπληγικός ο ίδιος και θα χαιρόταν πολύ για οτιδήποτε πιστεύετε πως θα βελτίωνε τις πληροφορίες που προσφέρει η ιστοσελίδα του σχετικά με την Αθήνα.
The European Network for Accessible Toursim (ENAT) talk about accessible.travel in a blog post today. ENAT have been very supportive of accessible.travel and have shared access data for various destinations.
Without ENAT accessible.travel wouldn’t have got to this point so quickly and I look forward to working with them more in the future. I’ll keep you all posted through the blog about developments with ENAT, of which, I am hoping that there will be many in the not too distant future.
(photo provided by Jani Nayar from SATH)
One of the key destinations for accessible.travel in the US will be New York. Unfortunately for us and for people with disabilities there isn’t very much information out there on the world wide web. Just trying to find a hotel with the right facilities is an absolute nightmare, I went to NYC in July last year and ticked the “wheelchair friendly” search box on a well known booking engine. This was a big mistake and I should have known better, I did email the hotel to confirm the access but they never replied and it would have been very expensive to call the hotel from Nicaragua, so I never did.
I arrived at the hotel at about midnight to be confronted with 6 steps and no alternative entrance. The situation got worse when I realised that the lift was so narrow that my wheelchair wouldn’t go through the doors and they had put me in a room on the fifth floor. All of the ground floor rooms were fully occupied but it wouldn’t have mattered anyway as the bathroom doors were so narrow that I couldn’t get in there either. They ended up putting me in another of their hotels that only had three steps to get into it and a lift that was wide enough for my chair. The hotel didn’t offer me any type of compensation, they didn’t even offer to pay for a taxi to the new hotel. It was only through the generosity of a French backpacker that I managed to get to the new hotel as he carried my rucksack and showed me the way. The service was appalling and the staff were rude, definitely not “wheelchair friendly” nor friendly towards anyone from what I could gather with the arguments from unhappy clients at the front desk.
This is the type of situation that accessible.travel wants to make a thing of the past through providing detailed hotel assessments and photos, so that individuals can make their own decisions as to whether a hotel is suitable for their needs or not.
With this in mind accessible.travel are trying to raise the funding so that I can go on a two week trip there to assess hotels, attractions, transport facilities, bars and restaurants and are looking for businesses that maybe interested in sponsoring the accessible.travel New York pages.
What we require:
I return accessible.travel will supply:
The total budget required for the sponsorship deal is $3,000 for all the above benefits.
accessible.travel are especially interested in researching New York at the moment but would also be interested in hearing from any companies that would like to sponsor a different city destination (US or elsewhere). The same offer would apply, for more information please contact me: craig@accessible.travel
Today my brother, Andrew, that works with me in Barcelona at accessible.travel went out and did a hotel assessment. Not only was the assessment itself really well done (although the hotel wasn’t as accessible as we would have hoped), he drew the perfect bathroom sketch and I just wanted to share it with you all!

I think we’ll be giving Andrew the job of drawing the bathrooms plans for accessible.travel as he does them much better than I do. The above picture is a little small, but on the actual accessible.travel site you will be able to see the detail much more clearly.
Update: You can now see the full review with photos and the bathroom sketch on accessible.travel