The project aims to increase tourist traffic and the economy of the Municipality of Kantanos-Selino in Crete. In this direction, the Municipality chose four beaches, namely Grammeno Votsalo beach, Elafonissi beach, Sougia beach, and Pachia Ammos beach, in order to make them accessible by disabled people. These beaches will host visitors with disabilities, residents and visitors who are transported by wheelchair and will therefore have all the appropriate infrastructure so that the visitor with disabilities does not encounter obstacles related to the layout and use of the common areas. In particular, the above beaches will have: Parking space exclusively for disabled people, changing room, transportable chemical toilet (WC), shading area, autonomous access for people with motor problems to the sea, a corridor that connects the above infrastructure to facilitate the movement of disabled people with wheelchair and signage with information signs. Also, the project includes the necessary publicity actions, digital maps of accessible infrastructures and mobile telephony applications to inform disabled people about all accessible areas of the Municipality, so that the Municipality is a fully accessible seaside destination. Tourism of disabled people is a special form of tourism with very good prospects and its development strategy aims to create a “critical mass” of accessible infrastructure that will be created by both the Central State, the local government, but also professionals who will give substance to the particular effort to achieve the accessibility needed to attract visitors. In the European Union, the number of people with disabilities is 50,000,000 people (Eurostat data, 2001 edition), who at least 50 % travel and are accompanied by an average of 1.56 person (data from Germany’s Federal Ministry of Economy and Labour), bringing the figure to about 65,000,000 people. And if they take into account the number of elderly people over the age of 65, who now have completely different habits and tourist behaviour from previous generations of peers and who are expected to almost double by 2050, bringing the figure from 20 % to 40 % of the population, but also of families with children in carts, which families in recent years have started to travel more and more frequently (two categories with similar access needs to people with disabilities) In Greece it is estimated that about 550,000 citizens belong to the category of “Kiniti Disabled”.