Staff were trained not just in safety protocols, but in understanding, patience, and communication with people who experience the world differently.
The park featured a wheelchair-accessible Ferris wheel, a sensory village, a special off-road adventure ride, and dozens of other attractions designed so that everyone could participate—not watch from the sidelines.
And here’s the part that reveals Gordon’s heart:
Guests with special needs get in free. Always.
Not as charity. As recognition that the world had already charged them enough—in exclusion, in barriers, in doors that wouldn’t open.
The park wasn’t just for people with disabilities. It was for families. Siblings. Friends. Anyone could come. But for the first time, the person with a disability wasn’t the one who had to sit out, who had to be accommodated as an afterthought.
They were the priority.
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