Blue spaces are celebrated for their restorative benefits, yet accessibility remains deeply uneven. This research challenges dominant frameworks that privilege visual perception and independent mobility, often reinforcing exclusionary access barriers. By centring visually impaired experiences, it explores how navigation, multisensory engagement, and interdependent interactions with water reshape understandings of access. The cake design symbolises both the warnings and restrictions disabled individuals encounter, and the potential to move beyond these limitations. Through a justice-oriented lens, this research calls for a fundamental shift—one that recognises access as relational, embodied, and co-produced rather than assumed or universal.