Monday, May 31, 2010

Built by kids for kids

The Kolle 37 adventure playground in Berlin offers an opportunity for children to take a hands-on approach to learning and play, by building their own structures (multi level cubbies, shelters and towers), cooking over campfires, playing with sand, dirt and water as well as tending to their own gardens. There is some limited supervision by staff on-site, but the children are ultimately able to test and explore their own creations - assessing for risks and safety. The children are able to learn valuable skills within an environment that they may not have access to otherwise - teamwork, trust, responsibility and respect for one another.

Kolle 37 is a rare example of a space where children are permitted to construct their own play spaces - constantly adjusting and changing their creations until they feel safe. Not only does this break down the fundamental ideas behind formal playground designs by adult professionals, but it allows the children to develop their own realm of adventure and discovery.

It makes me wonder if we are, as design professionals, 'over designing' children's play spaces and the role that children can potentially play in shaping landscapes - an involvement that I believe would reinforce their ownership of play spaces to create richer and more appropriate opportunities for play and discovery.

Photo from Public Workshop.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Just a quick update...

The Fresh Like To...Go Play event details have been re-posted due to some 'technical errors' and the links to the flyer are working now.
We hope you're busy designing some innovative playground concepts for the competition! Check back here soon for more playground inspiration.
Fresh Like To...Go Play!

The next upcoming AILA Fresh Event is an exciting collaboration with[co]design studio and Go Play!

We invite students and professionals to submit entries for a playground design competition focusing on providing play opportunities for children in developing countries. The playground designs should incorporate recycled scrap & junkyard elements and all access play - read the flyer above for more information and entry conditions.

Get creative and submit your playground designs before Tuesday 8th June (revised date) to: fresh.aila@gmail.com

The actual AILA Fresh event is on Thursday 10th June and will be an exhibition of the competition entries with a prize for the winning entry and door prizes on the night.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Recycled / junkyard playgrounds

Now about a week into the design timeframe for our Fresh Like To...Go Play! playground competition, here's some inspiration and encouragement from a local Melbourne playground.


I was recently lucky to visit Skinners Adventure Playground, a supervised community backyard play-space, specifically created for families living in public housing in South Melbourne. The playground is only open in the afternoons and weekends and has a supervised after-school care program on-site. Skinners Adventure Playground has evolved over the years to become a sprawling and imaginative space. Many of the play elements have been constructed by the local community from recycled or salvaged material - old tractor tyres, slides, gates, fence pailings etc. There is a bounty of challenging equipment, cubbies, boardwalks and tower structures offering opportunities for children to take some risks during play - creating a wonderful learning experience through exploration, trial and error and discovery.


Many modern playground designs seem to be cocooning children with unchallenging and mass produced plastic equipment, so it is refreshing to see a community build haphazard playground with plenty of personality and individuality on offer. The use of recycled materials / equipment throughout the playground adds to the unique environment and the welcoming local backyard atmosphere.

Stay tuned for more playground inspiration to come!


Photo: of a sign at Skinners Adventure Playground in South Melbourne on my site visit, showing photos of the evolution of the playground over the years through community efforts.


Wednesday, May 05, 2010

Guerilla Art, using the public.


Berlin as a city is known as one of those places that things happen. Parties in the street, in the U-Bahn, graffiti everywhere, protests. One of the latest things that I found browsing the internet, with my Post Berlin Depression, is this:


This is Rosenthaler Platz in Mitte, Berlin. One of the first chic and designery/artisty areas within Berlin. Those colorful paint tracks aren't normally there, what happened here is one of those guerilla art attacks that happen every now and then. Some people with some bicycles with some large amount of paint poured out said paint when the lights were red. Car drivers had no choice but to drive straight through, painting this work of art. It brings a whole new level to mapping, a 1:1 mapping of an intersection. If they had also done something like this:


This here happened in China. Quite the opposite place to Berlin, not so lenient Gov't, artists having less of a voice. However this was not done by a few people on some bikes, this was done by DBB Group which seems to be a fairly large design house. No matter, it is another great way of playing with street art, mapping, and the idea of greening the world.

Okay, back to work for me.

Some more links for Rosenthaler Platz: Video on archimag.de, Photos on Urbanshit.de, and Article in the Tages Spiegel (in German).

Tuesday, May 04, 2010

Designorama, 1st Fresh Event of 2010

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