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Paraplegic engineer becomes first wheelchair user to float in space

Michaela Benthaus, a paraplegic aerospace engineer, flew on a 10-minute Blue Origin suborbital mission, demonstrating accessibility and inspiring future disabled space travelers.

  • On Saturday, Michaela Benthaus, 33-year-old German aerospace and mechatronics engineer at the European Space Agency, became the first wheelchair user past the Kármán Line aboard New Shepard NS-37 from West Texas in a 10–11 minute flight.
  • After her 2018 mountain biking accident damaged her spinal cord, Benthaus turned to engineering and training, using a wheelchair and joining a simulated space mission in Poland.
  • The New Shepard's flight profile reached supersonic speeds before capsule separation, and Blue Origin made minor adjustments — an elevator, patient transfer board and leg strap — enabling Benthaus to board and float.
  • Support personnel reached the capsule and assisted the crew out immediately after touchdown, laying a carpet on the desert floor and carrying Benthaus to a nearby wheelchair as the six passengers waved.
  • The flight positions Blue Origin as expanding access to space for nontraditional candidates, while space agencies and private companies face emergency evacuation concerns and design challenges for disabled crew members, even as ESA cleared John McFall this year.
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A German female engineer, disabled by an accident, made her dream come true by soaring to the edge of space aboard Blue Origin's New Shepard spacecraft, proving that "space belongs to everyone."

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Telemundo Area de la Bahía 48 broke the news in on Saturday, December 20, 2025.
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