REDLAND City Council will investigate building a road to the Basin beach at Amity Point after Straddie Camping closed vehicle access to the area for residents in April.
Amity Progress Association called for the report following complaints from older residents tired of lugging 20kg kayaks 1km through the campsite to the water.
The report is also expected to include the cost of extending Wallum Creek Drive, which runs through a recreation reserve east of the campsite and past the Amity Point Community Centre.
Redland City councillor Craig Ogilvie said locals wanted to drive to the Basin where they could safely launch small boats and go fishing.
"They have been able to drive to the Basin for the past 25 years and there has never been a problem," he said.
"Forcing people to paddle to the Basin from the swimming enclosure outside the campsite is dangerous."
Council will have to re-negotiate a land lease with the state before a road can be built.
Straddie Camping, jointly owned by the Quandamooka Yoolooburrabee Aboriginal Corporation and the Indigenous Business Australia, said the vehicle ban was necessary to comply with safety requirements.
This month, Straddie Camping sectioned off The Basin, erecting orange plastic bunting at the top of an escarpment overlooking beach.
Straddie Camping CEO Clare Carol said erosion made the area dangerous and the camping grounds were not insured for people being injured on the rock wall.
Ms Carol said the safety requirements were part of good corporate rules and not subject to a land management plan or a lease arrangement with the state government.
"People are welcome to walk to the beach through the camping grounds but it's too dangerous to launch kayaks from the rock wall," she said.
"I've written to council asking it to build a safe launching site for small boats and tenders."
Vehicle access to the site was closed 17 months after Straddie Camping took control of the island's eight campsites from Redland City Council on November 1, 2012.