wheelchairs for sale melbourne australia

Wheel chairs for sale and available Australia wide. Select from our range of standard lightweight transit bariatric manual or electric chairs.Rehabilitation & Mobility Specialists Karma Mobility was founded in 1987 and was the first company to introduce aluminium frame wheelchairs to Asia, Karma Mobility has since grown to become one of Asia's largest, most innovative wheelchair providers. The comprehensive range of Karma products offers mobility solutions for a wide variety of requirements giving choice and control to end users.Buying format see all Weight Capacity see all Item location see all distance 2 km 5 km 10 km 15 km 20 km 50 km 75 km 100 km 150 km 200 km 500 km 750 km 1000 km 1500 km 2000 km Delivery options see all Showing all 29 results Default sorting Sort by popularity Sort by average rating Sort by newness Sort by price: low to high Sort by price: high to low Pride Go Chair – New Generation – Power Chair Jazzy Air Power Chair
Pride Jazzy Select 6 Power Chair Smart Drive MX2 + PushTracker New Generation 2017 Model R4 Pride Folding Electric Wheelchair Pride R-40 Fusion Power Chair Shoprider Cougar 10 Power Chair Shoprider Cougar 14 Power Chair Shoprider Jiffy Power Chair Shoprider Puma 14HD Power Chair Shoprider Venice UL8W Power Chair Shoprider Puma 10 Power Chair Pride Quantum 600 Scripted Power Chair Permobil C500 VS Stander Scripted Power Chairvintage thonet chairs for sale Permobil C500 Corpus 3G Scripted Power Chaireames chair parts los angeles Permobil C400 Corpus 3G Scripted Power Chairlift chairs recliners rental Permobil C350 PS Scripted Power Chairmetal cafe chairs perth
Permobil C350 Corpus 3G Scripted Power Chair Permobil M300 PS Scripted Power Chair Permobil M300 Corpus 3G Scripted Power Chair Permobil C300 Corpus 3G Scripted Power Chair Permobil C300 PS Scripted Power Chair Permobil C400 VS JR. Stander Scripted Power Chair Permobil K300 PS Jr. Scripted Power Chair Permobil K450 MX Scripted Power Chair Permobil Koala Miniflex Scripted Power Chair Days Healthcare Viper Power Chairsalon chair rental seattle Comfortable, user-friendly and agile, Power Chairs offer users of all ages from young children to seniors giving unprecedented freedom and mobility within the home and outdoors. old barber chair restorationIndoor power chairs are designed to be more compact and rounded so you can more easily manoeuvre tight corners and small spaces in the home.
Outdoor power chairs are more sturdily built with extra-large, wide-tread tires and increased ground clearance so you can safely and smoothly traverse rougher outdoor surfaces. Independent Living Specialists offers you a wide range of fully customisable power chairs from leading manufacturers such as Permobil, Shoprider, Pride and Days Healthcare. All of our power chairs offer a number of arm, leg and seating adjustments to accommodate a wide range of users. Whether you are looking for a lightweight indoor power chair or a heavyweight outdoor model, we’ve got what you are looking for. Mogo Custom Designed WheelChairs for Individuals our six main rigid styles are custom-built to give you any feature you need in today’s most advanced designs. Take anywhere styles that fold for tight spaces but are still 100% tailor made for you. One of the best accepted chair ranges with therapy professionals. Since we started in 1980, the Mogo team have been sports mad building every type of chair for every type of game.
If you want it, we can get it! We give you all latest technology and the practical stuff. 1 - 25 of 35 ads for "used power wheelchair" within Miscellaneous Goods products found, currently showing products 1 - 30 1 2 Next → Aidapt Compact Transport Aluminium Wheelchair Airgo Fusion Side-Folding Rollator and Transport Chair Anatomic Sitt Seabass Pro Mobility Base Aspire Lite Lightweight Wheelchair Aspire Lite Transit Wheelchair AusCare Shopper 12 Extra Wide Wheelchair Auscare Shopper Transit Wheelchairs Ausmedic Shopper 12 Transit Wheelchair Basic And Economy Folding Wheelchairs Care Quip 602 Attendant Propelled Wheelchair with Hand Brakes Care Quip 603 Wheelchair Care Quip 605 Transit Wheelchair Care Quip/Ansa Echo Transit Wheelchair Care Quip Combi Deluxe Transit 304 Days Healthcare Swift Lightweight Transit Wheelchair Days Swift Lite Manual Transit Wheelchair Days Whirl Transit Wheelchair
Drive Medical Bariatric Steel Transport Manual Wheelchair Drive Medical Lightweight Aluminium Folding Manual Wheelchair Drive Medical SD2 Folding Manual Wheelchair Drive Medical Spirit Travel Chair Elf Folding Transit Wheelchair Fondlight Samore A3 Tilt-in-Space Wheelchair Freedom Healthcare BRO 199 and BRO 200 X Series Wheeled Walker Freedom Healthcare Excel G3 Heavy Duty Transit Wheelchair Invacare Action 1NG Wheelchair Select Products by Supplier Location Access to this resource on the server is denied!Would you build a house for an elderly relative next to yours on a new housing estate?  The folks at Accessible Homes are hoping the answer to that question is a yes. Accessible Home‘s Rosette display house in Melbourne’s north is a three-bedroom single level house and what sets this property apart is that it is designed to meet the needs of disabled Australians. The wide hallway allows for wheelchairs to move around easily in the single-level home.  
The company has recently launched single-level homes with features such as solid wood floors, wide door frames, raised toilet seats, rails in the bathroom placed on reinforced walls, room to fit a wheelchair under sinks, a large garage, different bench heights in the kitchen, a lower height oven, a fold down iron board and light switches which operate on a gentle touch. Video: More options for older Australians The garden is low maintenance with room and paths for a wheelchair. These subtle features can suit a range of mobility requirements and can be adjusted to suit individual needs, from those with a child with disabilities to older people with mobility issues who want to live independently at home. Despite these many unique features, the company’s two, three and four-bedroom houses don’t look all that different from a regular new home. “Not everything is obvious, which is good because people want to live in a nice normal house,” says Accessible Homes owner and designer Stewart Johnson.
Johnson says he came to appreciate how hard it is for disabled Australians to live independently when he was briefly confined to a wheelchair following several car accidents. It buys time, I suppose to be independent, to live in a home. He says this combined with the need to look after his ageing parents made him re-think what kind of housing is best suited to older Australians and those with mobility issues. “I can appreciate how scary it would be for them at that age. You’re probably struggling to get through a day. But when they’re (older Australians) trying to get their partners into the old-fashioned toilet or shower at home or up and down the stairs from the car, it just must be a nightmare.  What it (an Accessible Home) does is, it buys time, I suppose to be independent, to live in a home.” There is a fold-down ironing board in the laundry.   “We all know that next step is higher level care which quite often breaks up partnerships between husbands and wives and the like, which is sad.  
I’ve watched my parents do that, and it is really quite sad. It breaks their heart,” he says. How to : Survive multi-generation living The company’s designs for the three-bedroom home can be built for around $295,000 fully finished on a block of land that a buyer has or on a new estate. The company estimates a new build will take 18 months. Developing and creating homes designed to suit these needs from day one is a much-needed innovation, according to Yooralla’s Chief Practioner Rod Carracher. “In terms of general home design, I think what Accessible Homes are doing is really unique,” he says. The rails in the bathroom can be suit a range of different needs.  Adapting a home to meet the unique needs of a disabled or elderly family members can be a pricey process. “Retro-fitting costs can be quite expensive.  It depends on the individual needs, but it can run into hundreds of thousands of dollars to change hallway widths and change bathroom designs.”
“Changing a conventional bathroom and retro-fitting it to disabled specifications, can be $20-$25,000 for a single room,” Carracher says. at a new location in Braybook in Melbourne to offer everyday Australians more information on the kinds of household products and living options now available for those who have a disability. “Overall it’s important that building design starts to move this way. The cost of retro fitting older buildings is prohibitive,” Carracher says. Adult children of those with increasing mobility issues or those concerned they are moving too far way from mum and dad are most likely to be attracted to this kind of housing, Johnson says. The carpeted master bedroom leads to the walk-in-robe and ensuite.   This could include both those who want to knock down their current home and build something more practical while selling off part of the family block, and those who sell their homes and build an Accessible Home on a new estate near their adult children.
“Quite often the next generation is helping too, their kids are ultimately the ones guiding them through that (process).  They’re the clever ones planning ahead.  When you get to a certain stage, you’ve left it too late because we can’t always predict when someone is going to get sick,” Johnson says. The kitchen includes room under the sink for a wheelchair.   Placing Accessible Homes in regular neighbourhoods will help Australians remain independent and improve the mental health and quality of living for older people, he says. “It’s a great situation you can get into where grandparents can contribute to a bit of babysitting and get to know their grandchildren as they are ageing and the (adult) children can keep an eye on them,” says Johnson. All of the rooms are wide enough to accommodate a wheelchair.   Johnson says in the years to come more middle age Australians will find themselves caring for or arranging care for older parents and houses like his could give families more time together.
“I’d like to see governments support it, in that it’s keeping people at home. If you can keep people at home then you are leaving them out of those very expensive facilities and hospitals that we know just aren’t working at the moment… if we can keep them at home it’s better for their health and financial situation,” he says. While this housing product is currently available in Melbourne’s north, Accessible Homes hasn’t ruled out building their disabled friendly homes in other parts of the country. “We are open to discussions.  I don’t think there’s a solid no to anything.  We’d discuss it and go from there,” says agent Jason Sassine of Jason Real Estate who represents the company to potential buyers. The low-maintenance yard includes a fold-down clothesline.   “We’ve got little doubt that there’s growing demand for this, ultimately we’d like to do something down in that Geelong and that South East area,” Johnson says. The company has a display home for the three-bedroom Rosette property in Mickleham, north of Melbourne, which can be viewed by appointment through Jason Real Estate.