One of the common threads I pulled in both the London and New York events was this idea of merging the playground with the city itself. This is particularly interesting in thinking about making play space PATH, rather than DESTINATION. Jenette-Emery Wallis spoke of the edges of the new North Park playground as 'permeable'. West 8's Madrid riverbank project is essentially one enormous path with play opportunities trotting alongside it at intervals; no fences, and no generational divides. The check-in kiosks Suisman Urban Design (another of the MoMA speakers) used for a walking event were more successful when placed OVER the paths rather than alongside them. We should know this, really; it's why the medieval gate wasn't just an entrance, it was also a shopping mall.
photo via west8 |
photo via west8 |
These are no narrow footpaths begrudgingly allowing access through the playscape. No, they are wide pedestrian walkways that often honor routes already trafficked by residents, like the playground below in London's EC1, where our intrepid guide Liz Kessler noted that an unanticipated benefit of merging path and playground was having the play space continually supervised by community residents passing through it to and from their shopping.
Merging Path and Playground de-ghettoizes the playspace, so that it is no longer children-only, but a part of the urban fabric that everyone experiences. And hopefully it reinforces the notion that children and their play are a welcome part of the entire city, not just of fenced-off and name-plated "playgrounds".
For a long time now we've been setting aside spaces in cities and towns for playgrounds. That has been good and necessary, because at least they don't get built on. But it's time and past time to move beyond that definition, and to make more enlightened decisions about where and how we site spaces for play.
Do you know of more play spaces that merge path and playground? I'd love to hear about them.
Lovely post. Having playgrounds along the path also makes play part of a journey. In Paris my daughter and I walked to the Jardin des Plantes along the Seine, wending through the open air sculpture museum. The sculptures inspired a lot of open creative play, and also helped her forget I was making her do yet more walking.
ReplyDeleteI love when art and play come together in such a big, physical way.
Your blog and the discussions it raises is a relief amongst all the play equipment ads you find when you try to look for websites on playgrounds - I found it by chance when I was looking for inspiration for playgrounds I was designing in a neighbourhood in Northern Norway. I practise as a landscape architect in Tromsø, Norway. When i read this post I really thought I had to send you this amazing new Norwegian park as a great example of how childen's play areas become an integrated part of the urban fabric of Trondheim. It's called Ladeparken or Sirkusparken and is designed by Asplan Viak in Trondheim. Here is a link to some images - hopefully google can transelate for you....:http://www.trondheim.kommune.no/content/1117703714/Ny-bydelspark-pa-Lade
ReplyDeleteI love this example from Madrit. It is not one but a serie of playgrounds, every 300-500 m, along riverbank.
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