Ooooh, I'm having so much fun. Yesterday I had an HOA board meeting, and they gave me a $35K budget to plan a playground! Wooohooo! I have to plan the equipment and site plan, get the estimates and have the entire plan ready to be voted on at the annual meeting in early January.
I'm sooooo excited. I can't stop shopping playsets and swings.
__________________
LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
After #1 broke his arm falling from the monkey bars, all the doctors, hospital staff, and ortho surgeons said that falling from monkey bars was the most common cause of broken bones among children. So I have to wonder...do you see many lawsuits? Not that I think there is a cause of action there, because I feel there is assumption of the risk, but I still wonder.
Personally, I think they have made playgrounds so safe that they are outgrown by the time kids are 5. (And yet, they still get hurt-which is inevitable).
so the 35K is just for the planning phase, correct? Because I don't think that is enough for an actual playground.
It's not like a park. I'm talking a small structure with a couple of slides, a commercial swingset and some benches and tables with the rubber mulch and a fence.
I priced the equipment and furniture, and so far, without the installation, I'm at about $16K. I figure $7K for fence and security gate/camera add-on, and that leaves me $12K for mulch and installation.
__________________
LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
After #1 broke his arm falling from the monkey bars, all the doctors, hospital staff, and ortho surgeons said that falling from monkey bars was the most common cause of broken bones among children. So I have to wonder...do you see many lawsuits? Not that I think there is a cause of action there, because I feel there is assumption of the risk, but I still wonder.
Personally, I think they have made playgrounds so safe that they are outgrown by the time kids are 5. (And yet, they still get hurt-which is inevitable).
It's an HOA, so yes, the homeowner's have assumption of risk, guests would be the only real liability. I'm not doing monkey bars, though.
This is the playground I like - it's about $9K before installation.
__________________
LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
Ahhh, I remember, I picked the first one because it's rated 2-12 instead of just 5-12. And I think it provides more under space - shade is important where I'm putting this.
__________________
LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
so the 35K is just for the planning phase, correct? Because I don't think that is enough for an actual playground.
It's not like a park. I'm talking a small structure with a couple of slides, a commercial swingset and some benches and tables with the rubber mulch and a fence.
I priced the equipment and furniture, and so far, without the installation, I'm at about $16K. I figure $7K for fence and security gate/camera add-on, and that leaves me $12K for mulch and installation.
Oh! I was going to ask if security cameras would be part of it. Good idea!
__________________
Sometimes you're the windshield, and sometimes you're the bug.
I think it depends on the ages you are targeting. The first one is better for smaller children because it does not have the monkey bars. The second one does have monkey bars, but based on my own experience, those few bars may not be enough to keep older kids interested for very long. Unless they climb on top and play up there. And by "older", I'm talking 6 or 7.
I have noticed that the major draw are slides. The higher and longer, the better. The second one, with its curly-q, was quite popular with my boys and their classmates. Another fun one for the kids were the ones with side-by-side slides so they could race each other.
I think it depends on the ages you are targeting. The first one is better for smaller children because it does not have the monkey bars. The second one does have monkey bars, but based on my own experience, those few bars may not be enough to keep older kids interested for very long. Unless they climb on top and play up there. And by "older", I'm talking 6 or 7.
I have noticed that the major draw are slides. The higher and longer, the better. The second one, with its curly-q, was quite popular with my boys and their classmates. Another fun one for the kids were the ones with side-by-side slides so they could race each other.
I have considered all of that and keep waffling between systems. My first thought is -
That first playset, a separate track ride (instead of monkey bars, kind of like a placed zip line, you jump up, grab it, and it goes across to the other side.
And then a double swingset bar with two swings for big kid swings and two toddler swings. Then on the other side, an adult bench swing.
__________________
LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
My biggest limiting factor has been those canopies. I have found other play structures I like, but where this is going, the option for shade is a MUST.
__________________
LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
Those track rides look fun, but when I took the kids to a park that had one, all the kids (not just mine) struggled with it. It seems it needs to be installed on an angle for it to work. Otherwise, they just dangle and yell for mommy to drag them along it. Even if we push them, there's no where to go without gravity pulling them along.
How fun! That is an exciting project! I think I like #1 better. I agree, that shade is a must. And I like the idea for swings that you mentioned. But I am with FWM about the track slides. Kids get excited about them, so it's still a good idea, but I know I always have to stand there and lift kids to reach and then push/run them to the other side.
This is probably too big, but this is a glider that I saw kids being able to use by themselves, and it's long enough to sit or stand on. And since it's elevated at the ends it pulls them along- at least til the middle.
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
I have a question, will this play structure be used by physically challenged kids as well?
__________________
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
I have a question, will this play structure be used by physically challenged kids as well?
It has the ADA transfer stairs, and I chose one without tunnels, but honestly - not that I know of.
I think the structure itself will be fine if there are, the only suggestion I would make is to extend the on ramp, for lack of a better word, closer to the ground.
We have a ball park and playground geared solely toward disabled kids. It's awesome. Of course anyone is welcome to use it.
__________________
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
DD wants me to change the tri-rings to loop rings.
Is there a reason to?
Unless it makes a difference in kid land?
__________________
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
I have a question, will this play structure be used by physically challenged kids as well?
It has the ADA transfer stairs, and I chose one without tunnels, but honestly - not that I know of.
I think the structure itself will be fine if there are, the only suggestion I would make is to extend the on ramp, for lack of a better word, closer to the ground.
We have a ball park and playground geared solely toward disabled kids. It's awesome. Of course anyone is welcome to use it.
I'm only aware of one disabled child in the neighborhood, and he is older than the playground is geared for.
But, this view doesn't show the 10 inches of mulch I'll have blown in.
__________________
LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
If the round hoops don't really alter the price, what's the harm?
__________________
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
Looks good! I was wondering how this project was coming along. I like the idea of a climbing wall. I would think tri rings would be easier to use, but kids probably know better, lol.
Looks good! I was wondering how this project was coming along. I like the idea of a climbing wall. I would think tri rings would be easier to use, but kids probably know better, lol.
I think that's the point. She thinks the older kids would want something more challenging.
__________________
LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
I guarantee you, that all the work you did and planning and budgeting, that there will be someone who is going to come and COMPLAIN about it, lol. Just expect it.
FWM, I had the same exact thought, but the playground specialist actually recommended against it. Said it gives many of the same issues, still washes away and when you have to replenish it every year, it costs 3 times as much.
And my friend's church did the rubber mulch and they hate the smell when it gets hot.
__________________
LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
FWM, I had the same exact thought, but the playground specialist actually recommended against it. Said it gives many of the same issues, still washes away and when you have to replenish it every year, it costs 3 times as much.
And my friend's church did the rubber mulch and they hate the smell when it gets hot.
I never thought about the smell. (Mine is mostly in the shade, so it doesn't get hot.)
I'd go with what the playground specialist recommends.
Have you thought about adding a water feature? My friend's complex has one and it is motion activated, so if there are no kids there is no water, but when a kid is there the water is unpredictable, which the kids love.
Have you thought about adding a water feature? My friend's complex has one and it is motion activated, so if there are no kids there is no water, but when a kid is there the water is unpredictable, which the kids love.
Nah. We have a pool. That's enough water.
__________________
LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.