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Mother builds Florida's longest ADA-compliant zipline to honor late son

With an all-terrain power chair and motorized lift, qualified wheelchair users can ride Jordan's Jamboree at the new Zip at Haile Quarry zipline park in Alachua County.

Jordan Klausner was a daredevil.

"He would be the one to jump off the rooftop," said his mother, Casey Glant.

She remembers taking her son to Disney World, where he would laugh so hard on the rides that his face would turn blue.

Jordan was a "fun-loving kind of person," she said, despite all odds.

He was born with cerebral palsy, a brain disorder that affects movement, and died when he was 4 years old.

Jordan's passing inspired Glant to build "Jordan's Jamboree," which at 494 feet is Florida's longest zipline compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act.

With an all-terrain power chair and motorized lift, wheelchair riders who are 4 to 7 feet tall, weigh 70 to 270 pounds, and are capable of upper-body control can ride a zipline.

The zipline is one of six at Zip at Haile Quarry about 18 miles west of Gainesville. The park also features the Double Dragon, Florida's longest zipline at 1,303 feet.

Jordan's Jamboree cost around $5.3 million to build and was executed by Spain Development LLC, owned by Karl Spain, Glant's fiance. The company then found investors to support the project, according to Glant.

Although Glant is grateful that there are accessible activities for those with disabilities, such as the playground at Gainesville's Kiwanis Challenge Park, she wanted to create something more.

"Jordan's spirit was different," she said. "To him, that was so lame."

The project was five years in the making and took numerous twists and turns.

"We really did not anticipate the complexity that this project involved," Glant said.

Between an 18-month environmental study required by Alachua County, a monthslong wait for a disability waiver from the state, and a slew of permits and contracts, the building process was far from easy.

The park doesn't have an official opening date yet, according to manager Anna Carter.

But it shouldn't be long. Zip only needs two more inspections until it's free to fly: the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services' Fair Rides Inspection and the city's occupancy permit inspection.

"If they say we're all good, then we can pretty much open," Carter said.

The park has started taking reservations.

A full-day pass will get you six lines for $115, a half-day pass will get you three lines for $65, and a pass for Jordan's Jamboree alone is $35.

Carter says when she refers people with questions about Jordan's line to Glant, she's reminded of why they're doing this.

"It's a heart project," Carter said.

Glant said she can't predict how people will react, but she's grateful to be able to give those with disabilities the chance to experience the park.

She's also happy her son can be remembered and honored.

"His life was not in vain," she said.

And she knows he would have loved riding Jordan's Jamboree.

"I can just picture him smiling from ear to ear," she said.

Copyright 2025 WUFT 89.1

Ciara Carle
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