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What's new in WCAG 2.2: What you need to know
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Skateparks are places for exercise, courage, and community. But what happens when classic skateboards meet sturdy wheelchairs—and asphalt suddenly becomes a space for true inclusion? The answer is Sit'n'Skate.
Since 2020, this Hamburg-based project has been bringing people with and without disabilities together—on wheels, on ramps, with attitude.
Skating means freedom. Speed. Control. Many young people experience all of this on four wheels – but not all of them. In practice, skateparks are often not designed to be accessible. And they are certainly not actively welcoming to wheelchair users.
That is exactly what Sit'n'Skate wants to change.
The project was initiated by skaters, activists, and sports enthusiasts who have one thing in common: the desire to open up spaces. For everyone. Their goal: **to create skating opportunities where wheelchair users are not only welcome – but play the leading role.
The focus is on a sport that is still unknown to many: WCMX (Wheelchair Motocross). Specially reinforced wheelchairs are used like skateboards – with jumps, spins, and drops. It looks spectacular and is just as physically challenging as skateboarding on two legs.
In joint sessions, participants practice, experiment, and support each other. The atmosphere is respectful, colorful, loud, and lively. And above all: inclusive – without pity, without special roles.
What makes Sit'n'Skate so special is the combination of sporting challenge and social aspiration. It's not just about tricks and techniques, but about genuine encounters on equal terms.
Children in wheelchairs experience what it feels like to fly down the ramp.
Young people learn how barrier-free a skate park can actually be.
And adults see how powerful participation can be through movement.
Sit'n'Skate regularly organizes workshops, public sessions, and collaborations with schools, sports clubs, and cities. The team brings its own equipment, offers introductions to WCMX, and also raises awareness for anyone who wants to overcome their fears.
It's never about performance or competition – it's about courage, trust, and growing together.
Accessibility doesn't stop at ramps. It starts when we change our perceptions of who can do what. Sit'n'Skate shows exactly that – and makes it clear that inclusion is not an exception, but the norm in motion.
It doesn't take much: a skate park, a few helping hands, a wheelchair – and the willingness to try something new. What emerges is more than just tricks on concrete. It's new perspectives.
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