Why safe playgrounds aren't great for kids

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  • čas přidán 19. 02. 2019
  • There's a case for making playgrounds riskier.
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    The stereotypical modern playground - with its bright colors and rubberized flooring - is designed to be clean, safe, and lawsuit-proof. But that isn't necessarily the best design for kids.
    US playground designers spent decades figuring out how to minimize risk: reducing heights, softening surfaces, and limiting loose parts. But now, some are experimenting with creating risk. A growing body of research has found that risky outdoor play is a key part of children’s health, promoting social interactions, creativity, problem-solving, and resilience.
    Some communities are even experimenting with “adventure playgrounds,” a format with origins in World War II Denmark, where bomb sites became impromptu playgrounds. Filled with props like nails, hammers, saws, paint, tires, and wood planks, these spaces look more like junkyards than play spaces - and parents are often kept outside of the playground while children are chaperoned by staff. Now, that question of keeping children safe versus keeping children engaged is at the heart of a big debate in playground design.
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Komentáře • 12K

  • @genericprofile2381
    @genericprofile2381 Před 5 lety +7902

    I can guarantee that when I was on a playground as a kid I did not play safely.
    "Hey wanna see who can jump off the swings the farthest"

    • @derpman7056
      @derpman7056 Před 5 lety +455

      I remember always burning myself on the metal slide when it was sunny outside

    • @clubonatues
      @clubonatues Před 5 lety +79

      thats the point...

    • @yuh2634
      @yuh2634 Před 5 lety +30

      Derp Man did that once and got a very bad scab

    • @muffinman5741
      @muffinman5741 Před 5 lety +8

      That is safe tho

    • @quasicroissant
      @quasicroissant Před 4 lety +51

      This is explicitly addressed in the video at 3:05

  • @ian-hm6cx
    @ian-hm6cx Před 3 lety +9746

    "If presented with an overly safe space, they end up seeking thrills and danger that the design didn't account for." This is the exact reason we had competitions for who could jump off the swing from the highest point

    • @user-dl3vn8ze9n
      @user-dl3vn8ze9n Před 3 lety +675

      And why we would climb up slides or climb on the railing.

    • @lovelykitty42
      @lovelykitty42 Před 3 lety +120

      don’t forget crossy road

    • @slightlysaltyslug8972
      @slightlysaltyslug8972 Před 3 lety +312

      Dont forget climbing on the roof of the playground

    • @myeramimclerie7869
      @myeramimclerie7869 Před 3 lety +166

      My classmate went so high on the string that he looped and fell on his back. He couldn't breathe and was taken to hospital. He survived without major injuries though

    • @myeramimclerie7869
      @myeramimclerie7869 Před 3 lety +23

      @@americanyoungins1678 he could have died but ok...

  • @11_jasonmaxmilana.95
    @11_jasonmaxmilana.95 Před 3 lety +5188

    Kids on modern playgrounds: *slides off the slide, dust themselves off, run to their mom for ice cream because they bored*
    Kids on adventure playgrounds: *Trench warfare intensifies*

    • @amxthyst_spell1662
      @amxthyst_spell1662 Před 3 lety +172

      Yeah I wish playgrounds can be more exciting

    • @11_jasonmaxmilana.95
      @11_jasonmaxmilana.95 Před 3 lety +276

      @@amxthyst_spell1662 sadly, most parents nowadays prefer the safety of their kids over fun. While it's not necessarily bad, majority votes decide an alignment of things.

    • @Sentient_Blob
      @Sentient_Blob Před 3 lety +84

      More like: Kids on modern playgrounds get decapitated from running through people on swings like it’s a Indiana Jones dungeon

    • @ganii1804
      @ganii1804 Před 3 lety +55

      I mean, to be fair. The idea of adventure playgrounds *did* come from a post-war environment

    • @reubanramsden6230
      @reubanramsden6230 Před 3 lety +76

      I was in a massive 'Adventure Playground' in Amsterdam and there was five story buildings with corridors and door purely built by kids and teenagers, they had groups who would compete on the best base and have wars, it was great.

  • @DylanPort
    @DylanPort Před 3 lety +5630

    “Oh boy! A steering wheel in the middle of a wall! This will entertain me for hours!”

    • @msjademarvel1542
      @msjademarvel1542 Před 3 lety +53

      Lol

    • @koba2160
      @koba2160 Před 3 lety +642

      No one ever played with that, you sit there for 5 secs then go next

    • @phantomaviator1318
      @phantomaviator1318 Před 3 lety +136

      I actually played with that.

    • @overfoxed
      @overfoxed Před 3 lety +66

      @@phantomaviator1318 was it fun lol

    • @Darling7.
      @Darling7. Před 3 lety +61

      @@phantomaviator1318 what do you do on it though?

  • @azrielaurelio8342
    @azrielaurelio8342 Před 3 lety +8419

    This explains why kids tend to run up slides

    • @lusamine7925
      @lusamine7925 Před 3 lety +464

      Then they ban that too

    • @lemonqvartz
      @lemonqvartz Před 3 lety +253

      i always used to try to find new ways to get around, but then they say to not do that 💆💆

    • @thisisepic3052
      @thisisepic3052 Před 3 lety +121

      And go on the out side of the high bridge

    • @ian-hm6cx
      @ian-hm6cx Před 3 lety +159

      or climb on top of the roof

    • @ecksspot8497
      @ecksspot8497 Před 3 lety +118

      yea, but then they say not to do that, and then wonder why kids hate going to playgrounds/recess at school.

  • @thunderbreeze_106
    @thunderbreeze_106 Před 3 lety +5495

    as a kid i would literally want to play more in a ditch, creek or a field with rocks and planks rather than at a playground with plastic toys

    • @FrancoKing419
      @FrancoKing419 Před 3 lety +51

      Ngl same

    • @milkeyway7105
      @milkeyway7105 Před 3 lety +121

      Yeah I rarely went to plastic playground when i was child. I would rather climbing planks nailed into trees at my neighbor's yard lol

    • @youngboisam_yt6384
      @youngboisam_yt6384 Před 3 lety +8

      Same

    • @dogebond6960
      @dogebond6960 Před 3 lety +12

      Yeah I reader trying to make Ramos out of 2x4s and logs to make bike jumps

    • @thelamelime8360
      @thelamelime8360 Před 3 lety +2

      Same lol

  • @jacobkorducki6940
    @jacobkorducki6940 Před 2 lety +1754

    We definitely tried to make our “safe” playground more risky as kids by climbing on top of the slides, bars, roofs. They definitely have a point here

    • @SoupyMittens
      @SoupyMittens Před rokem +129

      I've gotten hurt from "Safe" playgrounds more than the non safe ones. The designs are always so weird and I hit my head on everything.

    • @nataleeisjustchilling2737
      @nataleeisjustchilling2737 Před rokem +41

      @@SoupyMittens fr, I think they’re made for like toddlers or something because they’re always so small

    • @Mobobble
      @Mobobble Před rokem +25

      As a teen, me and my friend always go to a large playground and climb around the tall 3 story part of it and test our agility.

    • @arissamazumder
      @arissamazumder Před rokem +3

      @@Mobobble bro I can never find big playgrounds 😔

    • @Mobobble
      @Mobobble Před rokem +6

      @@arissamazumder I mean the playground I go to isn't even that big, it's just this one part of it that has multiple stories. I mean I live in a pretty nice town so maybe that's why

  • @lottevannoort1211
    @lottevannoort1211 Před 3 lety +2929

    In the Netherlands, "natural playgrounds" have started sprouting recently. They're essentially small pieces of land, landscaped with small hills, water with stepping stones in them, small wooden bridges, winding paths, and a funicular. They're all about getting kids to go on adventures and figure it out themselves, rather than creating a fixed playground. They're also esthetically really pleasing as they're a small piece of nature.

    • @mfhs2775
      @mfhs2775 Před 3 lety +114

      And they sound a lot safer but still creative and free

    • @canadianbigmac3501
      @canadianbigmac3501 Před 3 lety +42

      That sounds like a good balance

    • @reubanramsden6230
      @reubanramsden6230 Před 3 lety +77

      Yeah, I was in a massive 'Adventure Playground' in Amsterdam and there was five story buildings with corridors and door purely built by kids and teenagers, they had groups who would compete on the best base and anyone could make there own or join. Probably some of the best fun I've had in a playground.

    • @stijnsannen6709
      @stijnsannen6709 Před 3 lety +30

      Natural playgrounds are just slightly mor mazelike-playgrounds. They are fun to explore once and good for playing tag or hide and seek, but nothing compared to a real adventure playground.

    • @Haunted_Plush
      @Haunted_Plush Před 2 lety +20

      I made a comment that said how cool it would be to bring a freind or two (when you're a little more grown, like teenager age) and get into some casual roleplay. This sounds even better, being more natural and such. I remember in middle school I had the best time playing in the woods behind my house, I even made a little roof out of sticks that usually held together pretty well, unless there was a big storm or something. My two best freinds and I would go nuts designing various role playing scenarios in the huge field at our school. I feel like a large (like the size of a supersize Walmart parking lot huge, I mean *mega*) woodsy area dedicated to older kids (teens) to explore would be great, also maybe with some of the stuff the adventure playgrounds have, wood nails tires and such. This was a long comment, but I just feel like this might be a cool idea

  • @claretravels783
    @claretravels783 Před 3 lety +5304

    "Kids respond well to being taken seriously" is a very wise observation. If I have kids I really don't want to be a helicopter parent.

    • @gerardo49078
      @gerardo49078 Před 3 lety +23

      Nice

    • @otherevan296
      @otherevan296 Před 3 lety +33

      I wish you luck in achieving that dream (good luck with your spouse tho 😏)

    • @samanthavanscoder9536
      @samanthavanscoder9536 Před 3 lety +84

      It's soooo hard. I have to keep reminding myself I live close to a hospital. I only try to stop my son from doing things that will instakill him.

    • @LiLiKOiOiOi
      @LiLiKOiOiOi Před 3 lety +1

      🥺🥺

    • @claretravels783
      @claretravels783 Před 3 lety

      @@LiLiKOiOiOi oh hey army 👋😉

  • @joyboysplanet
    @joyboysplanet Před 4 lety +3363

    it’s all fun and games till someone screams “hammer time”

    • @vermin5367
      @vermin5367 Před 4 lety +54

      Tooth and nail baby

    • @wodawiod5447
      @wodawiod5447 Před 4 lety +5

      this is an underrated comment

    • @erojerisiz1571
      @erojerisiz1571 Před 4 lety +1

      Stardust Sydney bans everyone

    • @bluecandle4327
      @bluecandle4327 Před 4 lety +5

      “I’m dope on the floor and I’m magic on the mic”

    • @jyoats7959
      @jyoats7959 Před 4 lety +5

      It’s all fun and games until somebody wants to re-create the Easter story

  • @namenamename390
    @namenamename390 Před 3 lety +1743

    0:41 that kid is a hero. He isn't putting a nail into the wood, he's just hammering the bare wood. I don't know why, but I find this extremely funny.

    • @FireAlarmFreak
      @FireAlarmFreak Před 2 lety +25

      comparable to the kid at 0:15 lol

    • @juliesellers4493
      @juliesellers4493 Před rokem +73

      Gotta get it in the perfect position, it was crooked in the wrong way

    • @lovelylipbonesouwwwwwwwolv2198
      @lovelylipbonesouwwwwwwwolv2198 Před rokem +1

      Hahahaha

    • @James-kv6kb
      @James-kv6kb Před rokem +1

      Understand what you're saying but how is he a hero ?

    • @cube4923
      @cube4923 Před rokem +5

      @@FireAlarmFreakit looks like he’s photoshopped in (no shadow, 3x the size of everyone else. Why would they do that though

  • @kevinduliesco5468
    @kevinduliesco5468 Před 3 lety +320

    "A risk is different from hazard"
    He's got a point and parents always say "it's too risky"
    Rather than "it's hazardous"

    • @pedrosso0
      @pedrosso0 Před rokem +1

      What's the difference between risk and hazard?

    • @greg-un7bk
      @greg-un7bk Před rokem +5

      @@pedrosso0 HE SAID IN THE VIDEO

    • @lumnary7635
      @lumnary7635 Před rokem +5

      @Pedrosso risk is controllable; the higher you climb a tree, the riskier it is. Hazard is uncontrollable; finding a weak rotten branch while climbing a tree is a hazard

  • @nightshot1017
    @nightshot1017 Před 4 lety +7678

    The problem is the people designing playgrounds are focusing more on looks than play. Honestly modern play grounds look more like modern art then play grounds.

    • @Miki-pr2zq
      @Miki-pr2zq Před 3 lety +137

      Underrated comment

    • @burnedcalculat0r566
      @burnedcalculat0r566 Před 3 lety +261

      That is so true just looking at them makes me bored

    • @thomasraahauge5231
      @thomasraahauge5231 Před 3 lety +150

      I guess who ever pays for the playground is more concerned with aesthetics than fun and play . . .

    • @kit9993
      @kit9993 Před 3 lety +63

      I was at a rest stop and the playground was concrete arches and bumps

    • @sephia37
      @sephia37 Před 3 lety +12

      @@burnedcalculat0r566 Ikr, near my house, theres a old one and they only add nice stuff than boring stuff

  • @adolphstalin9193
    @adolphstalin9193 Před 4 lety +5422

    It’s like a wise man once said “if a kid gets injured, they learn not to do whatever got them injured in the future”

    • @jinshezzz
      @jinshezzz Před 4 lety +122

      @M P depends on what it was and how it's addressed by the Caregiver

    • @mcoates3649
      @mcoates3649 Před 4 lety +154

      My parents philosophy when handing pocket knives to children. They show you how to use it once, and they’ll show you again if you ask. But if you mess up beyond that... well, you’re probably not gonna make that mistake again.

    • @shufflethemtrufflesbabey
      @shufflethemtrufflesbabey Před 4 lety +4

      They learn to not do*

    • @scarlettcloete9457
      @scarlettcloete9457 Před 4 lety +2

      Yup once I lent on a braai and it burned my whole forearm

    • @blubaylon
      @blubaylon Před 4 lety +1

      Hello fellow cuber

  • @kaikoehler1763
    @kaikoehler1763 Před rokem +117

    I had a 'safe' playground at my school as a kid. I decided to come up with an obstacle course to use every single section of it incorrectly. No injuries, just a lot of flak from teachers and administrators.

  • @evil_zebra4275
    @evil_zebra4275 Před 3 lety +447

    Next to my school there was this field that we called “paddock” and we went out to it every day for an hour. In paddock there was a whole bunch of stuff; tires, planks, crates, trees, random bits of broken pottery, tarps, and branches. The kids could build whatever they wanted like dens and obstacle courses and our class even came up with a system for money, the broken pottery shards, the cooler the shard, the more valuable. Sometimes kids would bring stuff from home, like old bedsheets, and we’d make hammocks out of them. It was a really fun experience and I 100 percent recommend that schools have some form of adventure playgrounds.

  • @__moonlight__2054
    @__moonlight__2054 Před 4 lety +12355

    As a child when I saw a slide with a roof on, I’d have just climbed on the roof.

  • @theoverseer393
    @theoverseer393 Před 4 lety +7466

    kids should be "safely endangered"
    in other words, the play should allow them to take risks, but none of the risks should be inherently life-threatening

    • @user-rx1vq3hb6d
      @user-rx1vq3hb6d Před 3 lety +129

      MaximKat I think they meant more on “building a three story tower out of spare parts” rather than a rusty nail
      Edit: yes I do know that a rusty nail can get you a nasty infection. Tetanus.

    • @munirohm2420
      @munirohm2420 Před 3 lety +41

      @@user-rx1vq3hb6d a rusty nail is pretty dangerous if you step on it, search it up

    • @user-rx1vq3hb6d
      @user-rx1vq3hb6d Před 3 lety +81

      Meme Man then probably make shoes mandatory, or have kids collect rusty nails that can be exchanged for more tools or paint.
      Of course, have a supervisor in the area but they are only allowed to interfere if a kid asks a question or if someone gets hurt.
      Or make it a free ‘membership’ thing with a tag. New people will have to watch a short PSA on playground manners and potential hazards like ‘don’t whack each other with hammers, be careful of random rusty nails, don’t push in the build areas, paint is not food’ and other basic common rules.
      And maybe gloves won’t be a bad idea. I’ve been nicked by one too many sharp edges of the cap of an Apple cider.

    • @3d_young_joseph
      @3d_young_joseph Před 3 lety +6

      webtoon

    • @changingslow
      @changingslow Před 3 lety +18

      ワッフル i rather build a three story than fall on a rusty nail 😂

  • @candicefrost4561
    @candicefrost4561 Před rokem +277

    I just love that this woman saw kids playing in the wreckage of war and instead of just cringing at how sad that was she saw the full potential and decided to capture that spirit of discovery in spite of danger by intentionally setting up spaces in more wreckage to inspire more kids and ultimately encourage the creativity of the next generation. Seriously, props to her for doing something that apparently had a bigger impact than she likely originally thought.

  • @cutecat3004
    @cutecat3004 Před rokem +169

    At my elementary school we had a safe playground, but right next to it was a stretch of trees that was basically woods to small children. Teachers would tell us over and over to not play in the trees because it was dangerous in there, but you would just say "ok" and then go in when their back was turned.
    I remember one day me and my friends were building a den out of branches in the bushes and we found old barbed wire fence from old farmland, and from then on I was more cautious of what could be hidden by undergrowth and learned how to tell when stuff like that was hidden somewhere. No one got so much as poked by the literal barbed wire because of our exploration in the woods, but plenty of kids got hurt and even broke bones falling off of the safe playground equipment.
    It's interesting that I now get way too nervous when trying to climb something- something the safe playground was supposed to provide- but I'm very good at navigating woodsy and overgrown terrain.

    • @huffing_metal
      @huffing_metal Před rokem +5

      same!! I love going out of bounds in playgrounds and once i almost went face first into a spiderweb 😭 but i know how to climb over huge tree trunks and climb trees, stuff like that and its very fun

    • @callummcneill6266
      @callummcneill6266 Před rokem +8

      My primary school had an area with trees where it was encouraged to build things out of sticks and stuff. I remember having wars with the other kids using wooden stakes as weapons (not allowed but fun) and building massive shelters out of sticks and bark. we also used rocks as currency and my friends and i even set up a bank at some point (for the rocks)

    • @ThePenguinMan
      @ThePenguinMan Před rokem

      horrible teachers

  • @shameermalik4297
    @shameermalik4297 Před 4 lety +4241

    When I was younger I just remember playing for a couple minutes on safe playgrounds and getting bored shortly after and wanting to go home
    Its just not entertaining.

    • @ironspiderlink3652
      @ironspiderlink3652 Před 4 lety +65

      Exactly the same here

    • @peter-op1lj
      @peter-op1lj Před 4 lety +23

      Same

    • @dvaVivy
      @dvaVivy Před 4 lety +15

      Didn’t even get to play on one

    • @lemondrizzlecake7766
      @lemondrizzlecake7766 Před 4 lety +215

      We used to climb over all the trees that were AROUND the actual playground

    • @9990zara
      @9990zara Před 4 lety +81

      I would get bored after 5 mins and start climbing trees and digging in the sand/dirt. or climb up the structures and jump down

  • @NeillyVille
    @NeillyVille Před 5 lety +4500

    The more dangerous, the more careful you'll be. The more easy, the more clumsy you'll be

    • @bee5120
      @bee5120 Před 5 lety +203

      That's not how it works psychologically. Babies who haven't seen a snake before won't have any idea of it's danger and will have no fear touching it. Babies will readily walk off of a simulated cliff (the glass table experiment) without knowing that falling is dangerous.
      Sense of danger is a conditioned response. One famous psychological experiment conditioned a baby to be scared of bunnies by associating it with a loud noise. The baby grew up fearing rabbits.

    • @liamcollins09
      @liamcollins09 Před 5 lety +377

      @@bee5120 kids≠babies. By the time kids are old enough to play on this adventure playgrounds, they understand what danger is. Kids aren't idiots, and it actively harms them if you think they are.

    • @dannyclaws1
      @dannyclaws1 Před 5 lety +80

      Until some kid gets angry and throws the hammer at someone else

    • @LEFT4BASS
      @LEFT4BASS Před 5 lety +74

      Not just clumsy. You start looking for ways to make the playgroup more exciting, which often means making it more dangerous.

    • @CamilleonProductions
      @CamilleonProductions Před 5 lety +74

      @@dannyclaws1 They could do that anyway. Kids inevitably have access to "dangerous" objects at home or even at school. You could stab your classmate in the eye with a pencil. It's not like a hammer is the only object they can access can cause harm.

  • @leeb9342
    @leeb9342 Před 3 lety +113

    "THEIR TRICKING KIDS TO BUILD THEIR OWN PLAYGROUNDS!"
    I live on the beach, and me and my neighborhood friends once tried building a fort. We collected drift wood, and we yanked the rusty nails out of the wood and used them to re hammer into the wood. We only got to like a foot high fence sort of thing but it was still fun. We had people on different stations as well. Some pulling the nails out, others hammering, some people on collection, and another person on pounding down the sand so it was hard. It was much better than any playground I have been to.

  • @Valcuda
    @Valcuda Před rokem +376

    I'm turning 18 this month, and I can sagely say that if I had an adventure playground near me, *my computer would get a lot less use.*
    Normal playgrounds are only fun when you're a certain age, and with other people.
    Plus, risk is fun, and I remember when I was younger, doing something risky successfully was extremely fun! Like jumping off the swing as high as you could go, then watching your friend do it and twisting his ankle in the process.
    There was also running up slides, and once that got too easy, climbing the long tube ones, just for someone to unexpectedly come down it, sweeping you off your feet, and sliding all the way down.
    When you put a kid in a 0 risk environment, they'll attempt to add back as much risk as possible, and then some.
    But give a kid something obviously dangerous, and they'll attempt to reduce it

    • @Luciaa2763
      @Luciaa2763 Před rokem +3

      Stop blaming ur technology addiction on this

    • @SoupyMittens
      @SoupyMittens Před rokem +41

      @@Luciaa2763 I mean it would help if there was something to do outside

    • @Egerit100
      @Egerit100 Před rokem +21

      ​@@Luciaa2763 If you could give some suggestions on what you do outside it would be appreciated

    • @user-rk6hg5sp9o
      @user-rk6hg5sp9o Před rokem +3

      Jesus loves us all soo much that he sacrificed himself for our salvation:DDDD

  • @jimmykeochinda1173
    @jimmykeochinda1173 Před 5 lety +4587

    “Safe playgrounds“
    *me climbing on top of the play set and walking on rails*

    • @LittleSkyful
      @LittleSkyful Před 5 lety +130

      Jimmy Keochinda I really tried hard to play unsafe 😂😂, too. The other stuff was boring.

    • @CarnivorousPlantsAndGardening
      @CarnivorousPlantsAndGardening Před 5 lety +74

      @@LittleSkyful I would climb on top of the tube slides

    • @hellokitty7475
      @hellokitty7475 Před 5 lety +65

      Jimmy Keochinda thats exactly what they were talking about. Even in those safe playgrounds you still are making risky choices.

    • @fiferplayeralt7118
      @fiferplayeralt7118 Před 4 lety +8

      *heartbeat beats faster*

    • @kautzman2334
      @kautzman2334 Před 4 lety +18

      same, I'd find the highest point i could and jump off

  • @henryzhang3961
    @henryzhang3961 Před 4 lety +24232

    This explains why kids like Minecraft so much

  • @pixelmace1423
    @pixelmace1423 Před 3 lety +373

    Ngl if i was a parent I would not allow my child in one of these… without me! That looks like fun!

    • @hiffahyphae6707
      @hiffahyphae6707 Před 3 lety +52

      Lol, had me in the first half, not gonna lie. I would totally want to join in the fun as well

    • @tonykhang1984
      @tonykhang1984 Před 3 lety +4

      same

    • @internetperson9813
      @internetperson9813 Před 2 lety +8

      I have to say that I have had some traumatic experiences and I am not visiting any of those again

    • @maknyc1539
      @maknyc1539 Před 2 lety +2

      lol

    • @flickeringtorch
      @flickeringtorch Před 2 lety +11

      Same! I never saw one of these as a kid, why shouldn't I experience it as a grownup?

  • @evajohnson9059
    @evajohnson9059 Před 3 lety +63

    Another thing to consider is that getting hurt is a part of being a kid, if you do something that makes you get hurt, you learn to not do it again. Of course this changes with things that are life threatening but generally that seems to work. My dad has this saying “ if your gonna play, you get bumps and bruises”

  • @joojok72
    @joojok72 Před 4 lety +4391

    Here's the thing:
    Theres gonna be that one kid who hogs the hammer and threatens they will hit anyone if someone touches it

    • @logat1847
      @logat1847 Před 4 lety +21

      moyee 64 and when know that’ll happen

    • @MsBhappy
      @MsBhappy Před 4 lety +234

      maybe the city, similar to a lifeguard could employ or have a volunteer supervisor one who could show them how to properly use a hammer and nails.

    • @ddanggong7540
      @ddanggong7540 Před 4 lety +31

      @@logat1847 or the kid that stabs people. ( me)

    • @zillentdelta1339
      @zillentdelta1339 Před 4 lety +7

      Me with Great grandfathers M1Manual: Are you challenging me?

    • @pizzazpaz822
      @pizzazpaz822 Před 4 lety +70

      Or some mental kid throws a brick whenever someone comes close to his brick fort.

  • @syaz4380
    @syaz4380 Před 4 lety +7774

    "you are tricking kids to build their own playgrounds"
    Me: *m i n e c r a f t*

    • @solarcowgirl
      @solarcowgirl Před 4 lety +5

      SyazTYT's other uploads 😅

    • @daveroll6463
      @daveroll6463 Před 4 lety +118

      “Tricking kids to build their own playgrounds” that’s, that’s the fun of it

    • @syaz4380
      @syaz4380 Před 4 lety +34

      @@daveroll6463 i would actually wanna go in these playgrounds

    • @letsmakeoklahomaintogoodla4692
      @letsmakeoklahomaintogoodla4692 Před 4 lety +33

      "You are tricking kids to build their own playgrounds"
      That's.. the point

    • @shlecko
      @shlecko Před 4 lety +4

      @@daveroll6463 congratulations, the joke man has located the point

  • @UrbexTeen
    @UrbexTeen Před rokem +119

    As a fresh teenager, I have experience in “safe”playgrounds and when I was a kid they, weren’t the safest because when something is deemed safe you want to push more risk, risking hurting yourself even more

  • @jamiepayton1574
    @jamiepayton1574 Před rokem +71

    When you think about it, it's fairly simple. If kids take risks, they learn the possibilities and consequences of doing so and are therefore better equipped when taking risks in the future, which is of course an inevitable part of life.

  • @marcranger4596
    @marcranger4596 Před 5 lety +20896

    It's just like the slides. Back In the day there weren't those plastic slides. Only high polished metal ones. Where you had to calculate the speed in relation to the sun's position to determine if you wanted to be rare, medium rare or well done when you arrived at the bottom of the slide

  • @kenzbug2365
    @kenzbug2365 Před 5 lety +9338

    Even as a teenager, I would love to play on one of the adventure playgrounds

    • @LeaksHater
      @LeaksHater Před 5 lety +394

      Yeah, definatly. Rn I just sit inside next to PC, but if i grabbed some friends it would realy fun.

    • @bobtheball5384
      @bobtheball5384 Před 5 lety +440

      Right? It's so awkward going to a playground with younger siblings and not being able to have fun as their size.

    • @LeaksHater
      @LeaksHater Před 5 lety +98

      @@bobtheball5384 I have no experience with younger siblings, but yeah, i think i understand.

    • @kenzbug2365
      @kenzbug2365 Před 5 lety +184

      @@bobtheball5384 it sucks when playgrounds get so small for you. I live next to a park and I can barely fit in the normal sized swings anymore.

    • @lovelysparkle7931
      @lovelysparkle7931 Před 5 lety +9

      Truth

  • @hiffahyphae6707
    @hiffahyphae6707 Před 3 lety +111

    When I grow up and have children, I want them to have their own adventure playgrounds, but say if they need help with hammering something I would totally help... I honestly think I would join in the play with them. Adventure playgrounds sound exactly like what I’m totally into.

    • @Bigzthegreat
      @Bigzthegreat Před rokem +6

      if i ever went to an adventure playground i'd be the digger

    • @IsThisLossE
      @IsThisLossE Před rokem +5

      my brother and i would always build forts in the woods with our grandma, always trying to outbuild eachother or figure out how to make a working door. i cant wait to do that with my kids or watch them enjoy an adventure park. as i get older i realize how important it is for kids to just figure stuff out on their own

  • @naly202
    @naly202 Před rokem +46

    Depends on the kids. I was a safety freak when i was little. Never climbed up a tree without a ladder, got nice skates for Christmas but after i fell a few times i discarded them. Same with bikes and ballet lessons. I wanted to go to karate lessons, but changed my mind when i realised you dont only get to hit people, you may also get hit back.
    My favourite pass time : drawing inside.

  • @ericloja6150
    @ericloja6150 Před 3 lety +3912

    honestly, most things other than the swings weren't that fun in the modern playgrounds

    • @totalynotcatherine
      @totalynotcatherine Před 3 lety +136

      I can't ride the swings, motion sickness, so the safe playgrounds weren't fun at all.

    • @abbywambach8627
      @abbywambach8627 Před 3 lety +336

      and then some schools got rid of swings bc of the “safety hazard” 🤦‍♀️

    • @medleyshift1325
      @medleyshift1325 Před 3 lety +68

      y'all didn't play lava monster did you, the best way to avoid the lava monster is to climb on the outside if they come up to get you.

    • @winterd0tter
      @winterd0tter Před 3 lety +20

      climbing was fun!

    • @W-I463
      @W-I463 Před 3 lety +55

      There was barley anything to do...just climb up then go down.

  • @kagez6515
    @kagez6515 Před 4 lety +16955

    everybody gangsta until the undisciplined kid forces a nail into some kid’s hand

    • @tareag993
      @tareag993 Před 4 lety +1135

      This happened to me so many times, luckly i was vaccinated so there's a low risk of getting a disease of this. Yay!

    • @TheOPtmal
      @TheOPtmal Před 4 lety +1126

      @@tareag993 wait.... someone forced a nail in your hand.... multiple times?

    • @tareag993
      @tareag993 Před 4 lety +916

      @@TheOPtmal yeah, my hand looks like colander now

    • @namenamename390
      @namenamename390 Před 4 lety +845

      Then the kid of the overly religious family tries to crucify another kid

    • @cloroxbleach3023
      @cloroxbleach3023 Před 4 lety +266

      They start burning the cross and the black kids leave...

  • @nerdy8644
    @nerdy8644 Před 2 lety +176

    The reason why kids are so addicted to video games is because parents these days are overprotective and won't let them do or play anything outside that can even be remotely dangerous that the kids want to do or play. If parents were less overprotective and let kids play or do things outside that are dangerous, kids would not be so addicted

    • @zachary4670
      @zachary4670 Před rokem +21

      I can see that. Especially since the most popular games have almost always been combat, platform, or sports-based - ie, extremely active and risky .

    • @AVI-lh6rm
      @AVI-lh6rm Před rokem +22

      Not to mention, even if kids do wanna go outside, everyone lives in suburban housing zones that are a 20 minute drive at least from anything. Let alone anything interesting a kid would want to go to. Car-dependent cities results in kids going outside a whole lot less often.. especially when that outside is either a barren suburban housing zone or miles of stroads, parking lots and dollar stores.

    • @AVI-lh6rm
      @AVI-lh6rm Před rokem +4

      I should know, every word that came out in my comment comes from personal experience.

    • @Clover573
      @Clover573 Před rokem +6

      I play a lot of video games and many of them are games which involve the natural world. I dream about being the main characters in my video games because they actually get to be in nature. Unlike me. Link, Madeline, Terrarian. I want to be you

    • @gamermapper
      @gamermapper Před rokem +2

      Very true tbh, I'm a young adult but I love platforming games like mario so much because you actually have fun in them, there aren't a lot of fun activities like those adventure playgrounds which would've been amazing for young adults like me but I didn't even experience them as a kid...

  • @adnanjam
    @adnanjam Před 3 lety +91

    It makes sense, if you look at the playground that is "safe" they probably get bored too easily and kids figure out new ways and creative ways to use them. If there are not predefined structures they need to be more creative and cooperative to essentially create their own "play"

  • @Jellyfishcollector
    @Jellyfishcollector Před 3 lety +1093

    The older kids would find a way to get on the roof of the "safe" playground, making it unsafe. We would climb on the railings as we traversed it. We made it unsafe because it felt more fun that way.

    • @aelakaraminassian9065
      @aelakaraminassian9065 Před 3 lety +72

      I used to climb the nets, slide down the ladders and climb up the slides... needless to say my dad was on the verge of heart attack many times🤣🤣

    • @justakid2804
      @justakid2804 Před 3 lety +6

      @@lemon4087 Me too, my mom didn't really care cuz it was fun

    • @zombifiedlamp4154
      @zombifiedlamp4154 Před 3 lety +17

      There was a slide that had a roof over it so I would slide down that roof not the actual slide then fall to my death at the end, 100% would reccomend

    • @zombifiedlamp4154
      @zombifiedlamp4154 Před 3 lety +6

      There's a playground near my friends house and it has stuff like nets to climb on and it was high and there were rings hanging but there was a net kinda like a wall around the rings so me and my friends climbed that then ontop of the rings and flipped around the actual ring idk how to explain it but it was fun

    • @orcashamudeluxeu567
      @orcashamudeluxeu567 Před 3 lety +3

      Ah there was a play ground that looked cool bt was just fancy plastic, we climbed ontop of the roofs, on the railings, climbed under the we would slide in the room sides, and legitduring the wi tee

  • @IvanKuckir
    @IvanKuckir Před 5 lety +6399

    So basically kids just need a bigger version of LEGO

    • @LPPB
      @LPPB Před 5 lety +22

      Yep

    • @shareefwahab6606
      @shareefwahab6606 Před 5 lety +76

      Well yes but it's wooden and it won't fall apart so easily

    • @duck8316
      @duck8316 Před 5 lety +33

      Giant wood LEGO!!!!!!!

    • @duck8316
      @duck8316 Před 5 lety +22

      We need an area on a play ground with a bunch of giant wooden legos that we can build out of

    • @________dQw4w9WgXcQ
      @________dQw4w9WgXcQ Před 5 lety +11

      Imagine having all the different peices legos could be, but bigger. Then there would be that one kid/team/kid with a parent who does things for them that would the coolest things, like a pedal powered car

  • @drsinixt9269
    @drsinixt9269 Před 2 lety +19

    My mother used to take me to such an adventure playground, I never understood what she expected me to do there but after some time me and my siblings startet to build little forts and castels, even engineered slingshots to shoot rotting apples at each other. Was a great time. Learned a lot of things and that great friends would always wipe away rotted apple-goo from your forehead and help you back up. I'm thankfull my mom took me there, will do the same with my children.

  • @maliadreher6871
    @maliadreher6871 Před 3 lety +32

    Omg I love this. Playgrounds nowadays are typically just one plastic building with a short slide; it makes me wish I was born in the 80s where they did adventures things like this without technology. When I have kids, I will definitely be taking them to one of these.

  • @idkwhatnametochoose6197
    @idkwhatnametochoose6197 Před 4 lety +5317

    If Kids Play Too Safe They Start Playing Too Dangerous
    If Kids Play Moderately Dangerous They Have Fun

    • @louise4152
      @louise4152 Před 4 lety +132

      Why are they all capitalized,,

    • @wjsnactivist6141
      @wjsnactivist6141 Před 4 lety +15

      Well said!

    • @wjsnactivist6141
      @wjsnactivist6141 Před 4 lety +82

      @@louise4152 some people with dyslexia capitalize every letter to better read.

    • @gqcbutworse
      @gqcbutworse Před 4 lety +13

      ​@@idkwhatnametochoose6197
      IKPTSTSPTD
      IKPMDTHF
      NIJIHAODT

    • @mc-ate-bit3814
      @mc-ate-bit3814 Před 4 lety +5

      You got 1k likes
      Im the 1k person to like

  • @The_Horizon
    @The_Horizon Před 3 lety +7078

    I remember at my school a while back, there was this clay pit or something, and It was always full of kids digging through it trying to get the biggest rocks. The school removed it though, and everyone was upset.

    • @theobamiumchronicles2838
      @theobamiumchronicles2838 Před 3 lety +46

      Nice, a verified CZcamsr

    • @shyampadhra1591
      @shyampadhra1591 Před 3 lety +238

      at my school there was this patch of mud between two trees and we would dig for diamonds and emeralds which were just bits of coloured glass we used sticks to make the hole

    • @deniselee3388
      @deniselee3388 Před 3 lety +94

      When I was in preschool, there was an area for kids to dig in the mud, find worms, and mess with grass. The teachers were okay with and they did not take it away.

    • @A_very_good_cheese
      @A_very_good_cheese Před 3 lety +126

      Is too dangerus having kids dig holes and put rock
      Someone could have fun
      And we dont accept that here

    • @mrplumpkin_x3c
      @mrplumpkin_x3c Před 3 lety +54

      In my old school, there was this oak tree that was climbable and I used to climb it high all the time by the park like other children, then one day a kid fell off the tree hit the ground with his back and since then we weren't allowed to climb that tree lol

  • @staralchemist129
    @staralchemist129 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Counterpoint: I feel like these riskier playgrounds would exclude a lot of kids with disabilities. A large part of the fun of a playground is interacting with other kids and creating imaginary games that turn the play structure into a castle or pirate ship. That’s why families with jungle gyms still visit local parks. It’s also really important for kids to exposed to people who are different from them early on to build tolerance, and a HUGE part of that is normalizing disability. Someone once brought up the fact that playgrounds designed with disabled kids in mind are boring to other kids because they’re not “challenging,” but the thing is, you can’t design a challenge that works for every kid. If it’s challenging for a five-year-old, a ten-year-old will be bored to tears, and if it’s challenging for a ten-year-old, a five-year-old has no hope of completing it. Most playgrounds are designed to challenge little kids’ motor skills rather than those of older children, so inclusivity doesn’t really lose anything. Also, there’s lots of other ways for kids to take risks that don’t make a public park’s play area inaccessible for disabled kids, which are a way larger percent of the population than people realize. Take them biking, rock climbing, hiking, ice skating, sky’s the limit.

  • @Realistic_Secret
    @Realistic_Secret Před 2 lety +16

    We had an amazing wooden playground near where i lived when i was younger. it was designed like a castle and it was incredible. It got torn down and the plastic one that replaced it is awful. Its half the size and no one uses it.

    • @huffing_metal
      @huffing_metal Před rokem +2

      Wow! That sounds so fun! Theres this huge playground i went to once with so many hiding spots but its very far away from my house :(

  • @mowana1232
    @mowana1232 Před 3 lety +2062

    The saddest thing is actually how few playgrounds there are in general. In many towns, the only playgrounds you can find are inside McDonalds.

    • @wrightcember3879
      @wrightcember3879 Před 3 lety +91

      i live in a suburban town, and this is absolutely true. we have a massive population, so big we’ve had to expand most of our schools. we don’t have a single playground that’s public. all of them are on school grounds, all of which are private property. and my mother wonders why I’m so aggressive to my sister. lol

    • @crescentsky8920
      @crescentsky8920 Před 3 lety +28

      It might be just a town thing, because in the suburbs of the city where I live, I'm within walking distance of 5-6 playgrounds

    • @frutiguro
      @frutiguro Před 3 lety +48

      That's actually one of the reasons why mcdonald's and other large fast food chains introduced on site playgrounds. They saw it as a way to profit and attract more parents and their children, especially in towns where actual public playgrounds were either sparse or nonexistent. I agree, it really is sad.

    • @Archviste_
      @Archviste_ Před 3 lety +9

      or theyre really only made for little kids/teens are frowned apon by using them

    • @40watt53
      @40watt53 Před 3 lety

      Are you aware of schools?

  • @boeman6702
    @boeman6702 Před 3 lety +3154

    "Youre tricking them into building their own playgrounds!"
    When I was a kid, that is the dream.
    Just realized you can say this against Ikea but apparently no one is complaining

    • @minecraftstation6422
      @minecraftstation6422 Před 3 lety +105

      Imagine getting old and seeing ppl playing in the playground u built..

    • @boeman6702
      @boeman6702 Před 3 lety +65

      @@minecraftstation6422 Id be overjoyed and join them too

    • @mattiguess8094
      @mattiguess8094 Před 3 lety +11

      And it have no side effect about that

    • @williammerkel1410
      @williammerkel1410 Před 3 lety +33

      That is why I love living in a place where the soil is easily manipulated, it has the right mixture of silt and clay so that it is almost always firm and never runny, has a pretty much indefinite stand up time when you dig a trench or wall in it, and since it used to be 30 miles for the nearest shoreline in a glacial Lake at the end of the last ice age there's absolutely no sand, gravel, and no rocks at all, so it is extremely easy to dig in. Also makes for very easy tunneling too.

    • @peiithos
      @peiithos Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah like thats the whole point-

  • @sarahvlie9419
    @sarahvlie9419 Před rokem +13

    When I was in elementary school, the kids at my school had what we called “fairy houses”, they were along the fence in our back field, we all had our own little fairy house that we created out of sticks, leaves, stones etc. We were way more interested in our fairy houses than the playground. I wish we had adventure playgrounds when I was little!

  • @andro1419
    @andro1419 Před rokem +12

    I agree! When I was a kid we were given old sheets and logs and trees! Everyone was so happy. I made a hammock that actually worked!
    Someone made a seesaw that everyone loved.
    I made multiple working fast slides out of snow!
    This is fueling imagination. And it's great for kids!

  • @littlesailor5884
    @littlesailor5884 Před 4 lety +1815

    I feel like if an adventure playground existed in my area...kids won’t the only ones found there...teens will be there

    • @raegan06
      @raegan06 Před 3 lety +60

      That’s an interesting point

    • @sherrypappan9387
      @sherrypappan9387 Před 3 lety +143

      VANDALISM HAS ENTERED THE CHAT

    • @nrtouge
      @nrtouge Před 3 lety +70

      Spray paint would lrib be allowed and would be fun

    • @listorin6314
      @listorin6314 Před 3 lety +30

      I would go

    • @littlesailor5884
      @littlesailor5884 Před 3 lety +16

      potatoes potatolife I mean come on we can do what ever df we want and not get in trouble.. who wouldn’t? 🤣🤭

  • @hellohowareyou9745
    @hellohowareyou9745 Před 4 lety +14947

    The antivax kid who accidentally got poked with a nail: My free trial of life has expired

    • @zone_2915
      @zone_2915 Před 4 lety +311

      An anti vax prob wouldn’t would be the Karen that says no to all of this

    • @hiffahyphae6707
      @hiffahyphae6707 Před 4 lety +261

      Zone_ yeah, the anti fax kid probably wouldn’t be able to even look at the risky playgrounds because of his Karen mom

    • @corgimations
      @corgimations Před 4 lety +86

      “Change Da World”
      My last words
      -Antivax Kid

    • @ThatGuyLegend
      @ThatGuyLegend Před 4 lety +19

      @@corgimations you said the meme wrong but ok

    • @immortalsun
      @immortalsun Před 4 lety +5

      Low-hanging fruit.

  • @randomslavicguy2166
    @randomslavicguy2166 Před 2 lety +14

    i rarely played at playgrounds as a kid. I was happier playing in puddles, making rivers and dams from mud. Me and my friends loved wooded areas, abandoned buildings and wild junkyards. There was so much stuff to do, just with twigs, bricks and old junk. I never seriously injured myself while playing with sharp and heavy objects, but i did broke a leg on a playground. There was nothing interesting to do on a regular playground so we once did a competition who could jump the furthest distance from a swing, and that's how i broke my leg.

  • @sandponics
    @sandponics Před 3 lety +7

    I am now 74 years of age and grew up during the 1950s in a 1000-year-old former coalmining village in the north of England (without television). There were no adult organised activities or playgrounds etc, only old closed down coal mines, fields and woods where few people went, plus old disused railway lines and old buildings which we partly demolished and used the materials to build treehouses and dens in the woods. It was a great time to be alive. Oh, and our parents never knew where we were or what we were doing.

  • @natethegreat9977
    @natethegreat9977 Před 3 lety +2116

    Parents: when I was a kid I faced death at every corner.
    Parents with adventure playground: absolutely no way I'm sending my child there. It's too dangerous

    • @blinkcatmeowmeow8484
      @blinkcatmeowmeow8484 Před 3 lety +83

      They also went to school uphill and came back uphill.

    • @verticalflyingb737
      @verticalflyingb737 Před 3 lety +10

      @@blinkcatmeowmeow8484 deep.

    • @benjaminmateles1353
      @benjaminmateles1353 Před 3 lety +8

      When we were watching october sky and were shooting an abandoned car cause they were bored, my dad said that if someone had suggested that when he was a kid no one would think twice. And I am not allowed to climb a tree because it’s to dangerous.

    • @ld1661
      @ld1661 Před 3 lety +1

      @@blinkcatmeowmeow8484 Well actually if they went to school uphill they should come back down hill

    • @megandunnett7900
      @megandunnett7900 Před 3 lety +6

      @@ld1661 that’s the joke dude.

  • @Chlo-ee
    @Chlo-ee Před 3 lety +3980

    Everyone’s having a great time until Karen’s kid shows up

    • @tech-hilfeportal6611
      @tech-hilfeportal6611 Před 3 lety +140

      But there isn't a manager what will they do?

    • @zatzu
      @zatzu Před 3 lety +58

      Let them have fun. They won't last too long

    • @yeshi2031
      @yeshi2031 Před 3 lety +101

      It’s okay, hammer a nail into them and their Mom would regret being anti vax.

    • @adelinatimercan5183
      @adelinatimercan5183 Před 3 lety +14

      @@yeshi2031 Ehh, that seems a little too violent

    • @siroomik
      @siroomik Před 3 lety +48

      Karen's kids are the type of kids to hit other with tools instead of using them

  • @TRDiscordian
    @TRDiscordian Před rokem +9

    I’m not even that old and I talk about how I used to be allowed to build things with wood, saws, hammer, and nails as a child. Seems to blow some people’s minds but what’s the worst a I could have done to myself? Broken a finger, gotten a minor cut? I can’t believe how we’re so over protective we restrict children’s ability to self-discover.
    In terms of playgrounds idk we had snow.
    Edit: I see other comments referring to kids hurting other kids. Very valid argument, I was supervised.

  • @cryptor6033
    @cryptor6033 Před rokem +30

    Our elementary school had a playground section that also happened to be built near an area which was mostly untouched
    Most of the kids would go there instead of playing in the 'safe playground'
    I remember one of the main things we did was 'digging for fossils' in the dirt/sand/gravel with small rocks lol, that was way more fun than the safe playground every could be.
    I definitely feel like allowing children to explore and adventure into a more wild area is more appealing to the children themselves than safe playgrounds, where there was basically nothing to do.

    • @Sans_Official.
      @Sans_Official. Před 6 měsíci

      Same thing is happening at the field next to the playground at our school

  • @sirrobertwalpole1017
    @sirrobertwalpole1017 Před 5 lety +4088

    It's all fun and games until the playground Fight has hammers

    • @toradragon
      @toradragon Před 5 lety +211

      Or the kids want to reenact Lord of the Flies

    • @abigailsuarez6337
      @abigailsuarez6337 Před 5 lety +13

      @@toradragon omg THIS! 😭

    • @benjaminRhodesLEGO
      @benjaminRhodesLEGO Před 5 lety +118

      trust me, coming from someone who was an over emotional kid myself, Hitting someone with a hammer would *Never* Happen unless you were seriously sadistic

    • @SuperPlatypus123
      @SuperPlatypus123 Před 5 lety +85

      Ben which, trust me, some kids are

    • @Iquey
      @Iquey Před 5 lety +16

      I remember when at my local park had construction going on, and for some reason in like 1998-1999 ish, they didn't fence off all the stuff, so we played in the concrete tubes and caterpillar diggers and basically everything we were NOT supposed to play on.😂 Also, before they fenced off the pond as a "sensitive natural area" we played in the awful swampy pond and turned rocks over and hunted for leeches.

  • @oscarenrique751
    @oscarenrique751 Před 4 lety +15962

    Parents: kids these days don't want to go outside and play.
    *playground that encourages kids to play outside and be creative is built*
    Parents: nO wAy mY kiD iS pLAyIng tHeRe.

    • @Mudthewobbledog
      @Mudthewobbledog Před 4 lety +376

      Oscar Enrique that’s what a Karen would say

    • @MrGiancarlo36
      @MrGiancarlo36 Před 4 lety +43

      @@Mudthewobbledog sorry but what is a Karen?

    • @familyfun359
      @familyfun359 Před 4 lety +174

      oel ortsac A entitled (most of the time) woman

    • @lilfriendlyapricot7150
      @lilfriendlyapricot7150 Před 4 lety +55

      Oscar Enrique my parents took me to one once when we were on vacation and I hated lol xdd idk it just seemed boring to me because it was so old and rusty

    • @cocoshort6528
      @cocoshort6528 Před 4 lety +47

      @@lilfriendlyapricot7150 that probably means you weren't taught well

  • @ndh.media_
    @ndh.media_ Před 2 lety +8

    I go to Greece often with my family as that is my motherland. One of my most fond memories as a kid, even now when we go back, is visiting this zoo in the middle of some woods by my home town. Amongst those woods is a rock, which has a glossy, low-friction surface which makes it easy to slide down. Yes... it's a rock slide, and you wouldn't believe the HOURS my cousins and I would spend on and around that rock. What safety is around there? Absolutely nothing. And that's the beauty of being a kid; you don't care. You don't care about risk, danger, hazards, death. You just find whatever you can, be it a branch, an old can of beans, or some random slippery rock in the middle of some woods in Greece, and have fun. Society is starting to pull that away from kids, and it's really sad to think about.

  • @wojtekpolska1013
    @wojtekpolska1013 Před 2 lety +12

    As a child in "conventional" playground i found only 3 things i enjoyed:
    Swings - i liked to swing high and jump off at the high point to see how far away from the swing i could land
    the pole thing going from the higher part to the ground, cause i could come down like a fireman
    and the pull-up bars, cause i could climb on top of them and sit there above everyone else
    everything else was mostly boring, i would probably use the slides more tho, but they were burning hot from the sun

  • @dolly8714
    @dolly8714 Před 3 lety +2436

    "they're treating kids into building their own playground" that.... tha- thats the point... its so kids can build things from their imagination.... they arent being forced to do it like actuall jobs.....

  • @itsvizor171
    @itsvizor171 Před 3 lety +5305

    I cannot describe in words how much I’ve been caged from taking risks in my life. I’ve never been allowed to make my own decisions or let my imagination run wild and now that I’m 17, my parents have suddenly pushed me into the hot water saying “decide what you want to do in your future”. How will I know? I’ve never experienced enough things to pick out what I’m most passionate about, I’ve never been given any creative independence. How do you expect me to bloom out of your shadow suddenly? You’ve just put me back a thousand steps!

    • @kimchichin
      @kimchichin Před 3 lety +498

      man, we have the same story. i’m almost turning 18 and they expect me to be so mature with the knowledge of who i wanna be in the future like ??? they don’t even let me go to sleepovers, i have never been to one. have never went to another city or country by myself.

    • @iamanidiotbut5523
      @iamanidiotbut5523 Před 3 lety +165

      Life isn’t fair. Our parents often aren’t the greatest at preparing us for life :(

    • @firemangan2731
      @firemangan2731 Před 3 lety +74

      Your parents are the dumbest ones in existence, further proving my theory that alot of parents just want kids to have power and control over one’s life.

    • @Mr_Yeah
      @Mr_Yeah Před 3 lety +255

      @@firemangan2731 I don't think the main point is power and control. I think that some parents treat their kids like a shiny new SUV without driving off-road. They value some things so much, that they never tap the full potential just to avoid even the littlest dent. But this behavior leads to disadvantages which they accept.

    • @honzapansky440
      @honzapansky440 Před 3 lety +34

      @@kimchichin thats sad. But doesn't have necessarily to be sad. Let's break the cycle.
      Wanna come to my city? I can show you some interesting spots here. Or even the country itself, chances you are from same country are pretty low statistically.
      For starters, it could be your 1st visited city/country by yourself. + Experience. + new points of view you are likely to discover. + Adventure.
      I don't really care that much for who are you or where are you from, but if there's a thing I can help a young soul to grow and discover itself, I am in.
      PS. How do a youtube user contact another youtube user outside of comments?

  • @JAYoung-cs5xx
    @JAYoung-cs5xx Před rokem +12

    The neighborhood I grew up in had amazing playgrounds, although there were no movable parts. They’ve all been replaced with the most antiseptic boring playground structures that would have captivated my attention for maybe 5 minutes as a kid. I used to spend hours at my favourite playground and never get bored.

  • @alohaella8875
    @alohaella8875 Před 3 lety +24

    I am still a kid and this is something that I want to have so bad. This can make kids more independent and this seems like fun

  • @FireBirdTheEpic
    @FireBirdTheEpic Před 4 lety +2387

    I'm not worried about kids hurting themselves, I'm worried about kids with aggression issues or kids too young to have developed empathy hurting each other

    • @Helperbot-2000
      @Helperbot-2000 Před 4 lety +233

      and karen

    • @ghostdagreat
      @ghostdagreat Před 4 lety +200

      Yeah, I like this idea, but the issue is some kids who will not be able to control themselves and hurt others

    • @Helperbot-2000
      @Helperbot-2000 Před 4 lety +169

      @@ghostdagreat dotn worry, those kids will be *E X E C U T E D*

    • @ranchocommodorereef
      @ranchocommodorereef Před 4 lety +113

      Omg so true. I agree with you. Some kids do not know the boundaries. And you only have one life, so use it wisely and don't abuse it.

    • @sydneyatkins6249
      @sydneyatkins6249 Před 4 lety +5

      I 100% agree

  • @lobetec314
    @lobetec314 Před 4 lety +3338

    Some kids act safely, but others would throw the hammers everywhere, or rip off the stuff that was already built

    • @imastatistic8347
      @imastatistic8347 Před 4 lety +246

      Those are the kids we used to throw dirt clogs at

    • @Artemi22
      @Artemi22 Před 4 lety +73

      Kids nowadays would, back in the day probably not

    • @Artemi22
      @Artemi22 Před 4 lety +40

      @shi. good question

    • @elizabethschwartz3619
      @elizabethschwartz3619 Před 4 lety +226

      That’s the point of the video though. We can’t shelter kids. They’ll have to figure it out on their own. If some kid is ripping the stuff already built, that’s an opportunity for growth for the kid who’s ripping it and the kid who built it.

    • @casswashwash1070
      @casswashwash1070 Před 4 lety +8

      Elizabeth Schwartz They do that with their toys etc now anyway though

  • @gaminggeckos4388
    @gaminggeckos4388 Před 3 lety +10

    I can definitely confirm a part of this. When I was in Elementary school, we had a standard "safe" playground. I'd always try to find the most risky and adventurous activities I could, like climbing the poles on swing sets, climbing on top of of that roof thing mentioned at 0:07, and balancing on various things.

    • @littlegamer00
      @littlegamer00 Před 2 lety

      I like climbing on the playground's fence and going head first

  • @1DROCKS12345
    @1DROCKS12345 Před 3 lety +8

    When I was like nine they redid all the playgrounds in my town, including the school ones, and it was so boring. They spent so much money on it, had it closed off for at least six months and at the end all we wanted was for it to be turned back again. It used be a kind of mix between regular and risky playground and it was great and they just got rid of it all.

  • @harrisonwebbe9633
    @harrisonwebbe9633 Před 5 lety +1511

    All fun and games until that one kid starts launching hammers

    • @calebmckinnonnb4019
      @calebmckinnonnb4019 Před 5 lety +21

      This Literally made me laugh out loud

    • @hodasadat488
      @hodasadat488 Před 5 lety +2

      Caleb McKinnonNB same

    • @bigstupid783
      @bigstupid783 Před 5 lety +14

      Just Jess you could do that in any other playground

    • @AquaMarino
      @AquaMarino Před 4 lety +15

      That is where they will know how to control by themselves.

    • @CC-fo7oh
      @CC-fo7oh Před 4 lety +3

      I'd be the one throwing metal things to see how far they'd go into the ground

  • @yo_yeojin
    @yo_yeojin Před 5 lety +5823

    *_*suddenly remembers that one Spongebob episode when Mr. Krabs made a junk playground*_*

    • @carlosmarsal2230
      @carlosmarsal2230 Před 5 lety +39

      Stolen comment

    • @dagdnoob
      @dagdnoob Před 5 lety +13

      Daja_Blue 😀🤨🤨😋🥰🤨😃💩😛🥰😃😃😛😋😃🥰💩😋🤨🥰🥰🤨😋💩🥰😋🥰💩😋🤨😃😀🥰😋😛😀🏸🎽🛹🏸🎽🛹🥋🏂🏏🥋⛷🏏🥋⛷🏏🥋⛷🥋🏏🏏⛷🏏⛷🏏🥋🇦🇿🇨🇳🇧🇧🇦🇶🇧🇪🇦🇶🇹🇩🇧🇪🇦🇶🇧🇧🇧🇪🇧🇫🇦🇺🇧🇴🇧🇩🇧🇲⛳️🥅⛳️🍺🥣🍸🏐🥡🏐🍾🍺🏒🍺🥂🏒🍺🍩⛳️🥂🎽🍼🥂🍩🍼🥂🍩🍼🥂🍩🍺🥌🥂🍩🥋🥊🥊🥊🥋🏏⛷🚣‍♀️🥌🚣‍♀️🌌🏢⛪️🏭🌌⛪️🏪🏠🖱🏪🏠🏢🏪🏠💾🏪💽🏦🏪💽🏭🏭🖨⛪️🗃🗓📤📄🗓📤📄📤📄📤📝📤🔏📤🔏📤📄🖍🗓📄🗓📄🖍📄🖍🗓📬🗓🧡📤📄🗓

    • @shadefoxthepenguin
      @shadefoxthepenguin Před 5 lety +21

      Krabby land

    • @maivrse
      @maivrse Před 5 lety +17

      Daja_Blue my wife would never steal anyone’s comment. you’re just jealous because shEs SmArTer tHan yOu and has a better love for kpop than you ever will 😤 uH sis steP off because chuuchuutrain is the ruler of you all and you better bow down and worship her or you’ll pay for your deadly sins 😡

    • @yo_yeojin
      @yo_yeojin Před 5 lety +2

      @@shadefoxthepenguin Yeah

  • @garururu8864
    @garururu8864 Před 2 lety +39

    Parents and other authorities tend to forget that children weren't always raised in clean, injury-free environments. We're a social, curious, and constantly inventive species that had thrived on the concept of taking risks for thousands, millions of years. Kids are an even greater form of that due to their limited experience, so why not at least entertain it in a controlled environment that puts them in charge? Even if they get a minor injury, it could grow to be a valuable memory and lesson. I don't see how it's a job either when the kid is willing and excited to craft with no monetary incentive, almost like not every motive revolves around capital.

  • @corylahey615
    @corylahey615 Před 2 lety +8

    One time a few of my friends and I in the winter took some of those little plastic shovels they give the kids for some reason in school and dug out an entire snowbank that the plow had made. 2 enterances, a slide in the top, and 2 deep caverns that you could lay down in. It was fun, soundproof too. Way more fun than I've ever had on my schools swings or something.

  • @BeanBag343
    @BeanBag343 Před 4 lety +2439

    Parents: wonder why kids don't want to go outside anymore
    Playground: 6ft tall, one slide, one ladder, one staircase
    Kid: I just built a mansion with a water slide and roller coaster in Minecraft!

    • @Parker-nm9cg
      @Parker-nm9cg Před 4 lety +239

      THIS. you get it. I only used to play outside because I could get creative with it- but now it's much more engaging for me to be online, to be writing stories and playing Minecraft and stuff. If there was stuff I could _do_ outside that wasn't just wandering around and staring at dead weeds, it would be a lot more fun.

    • @AidanTheBandit
      @AidanTheBandit Před 3 lety +23

      I love Minecraft. I have a whole channel about it

    • @SenhorKoringa
      @SenhorKoringa Před 3 lety +10

      AidanTheBandit how original

    • @AidanTheBandit
      @AidanTheBandit Před 3 lety +25

      Carnival Clown thank you

    • @SenhorKoringa
      @SenhorKoringa Před 3 lety +1

      AidanTheBandit that was sarcasm

  • @1UpTHAI-PLEASE-SUBSCRIBE
    @1UpTHAI-PLEASE-SUBSCRIBE Před 4 lety +9023

    Everybody gangsta until the kids start playing bible

    • @Helperbot-2000
      @Helperbot-2000 Před 4 lety +1216

      "we gonna play bible!"
      *"who wanna be jesus!?"*

    • @VibhorWase
      @VibhorWase Před 4 lety +131

      We never had bullies growing up...but then, kids didn't have problems in the first place to become a bully

    • @lexi9761
      @lexi9761 Před 4 lety +334

      @@VibhorWase that's a straight up lie

    • @dghsdjk44
      @dghsdjk44 Před 4 lety +75

      Vibhor Wase Sir you are capping. That’s the fact.

    • @lonely1951
      @lonely1951 Před 4 lety +164

      Nothin’ll toughen a kid up like a good hearty crucification!

  • @kentslocum
    @kentslocum Před rokem +21

    When I was growing up, I'd dig holes in the backyard. When I was a little older, my Dad let me build a wooden submarine and bridge. I spent countless hours outside working on these projects.

    • @RayOfSunlight984
      @RayOfSunlight984 Před rokem +1

      That's a supporting father you have there

    • @kentslocum
      @kentslocum Před rokem +1

      @@RayOfSunlight984 Yep! My mom eventually figured out how to use this to her advantage: she'd send me out to the backyard with a pickaxe and have me dig trenches where she wanted to plant her garden. I was her human rototiller!

    • @RayOfSunlight984
      @RayOfSunlight984 Před rokem

      @@kentslocum A little abusive i would say, but what you think?

    • @kentslocum
      @kentslocum Před rokem +1

      @@RayOfSunlight984 I'd call it keeping me out of trouble!

    • @RayOfSunlight984
      @RayOfSunlight984 Před rokem +1

      @@kentslocum Heh, yeah, mothers often want to keep their children free of dangers but, it's the risks that teaches us to not do the things

  • @gaiaaoi1005
    @gaiaaoi1005 Před 3 lety +7

    I remember around the 90s when i was a kid, our backyard was full of tools and it was the best moments of my childhood. I mix a lot of toxic powders (like cement and glue), but i knew those were toxic, and was careful in handling it. I agree with these type of adventure playgrounds. They allow children to use their creativity and logic

  • @lemonanth
    @lemonanth Před 4 lety +693

    4:03
    "They're tricking kids into building their own playgrounds"
    But is it really work if it's fun?

    • @cryo_life
      @cryo_life Před 4 lety +63

      It's like hands on learning. Now that's fun

    • @benjaminnewlon7865
      @benjaminnewlon7865 Před 4 lety +74

      if you enjoy your job, you'll never work a day in your life...

    • @flamingo1765
      @flamingo1765 Před 3 lety +3

      @@benjaminnewlon7865 Probably not. The world isn't sunshine and rainbows

    • @theoneabovemost7865
      @theoneabovemost7865 Před 3 lety +28

      @@flamingo1765 ...but it isn't rain and thunderstorms now is it

    • @flamingo1765
      @flamingo1765 Před 3 lety

      @@theoneabovemost7865 Sure...

  • @yocebaby1
    @yocebaby1 Před 5 lety +1709

    So basically the Krusty Krab playground.

  • @wowgrab7553
    @wowgrab7553 Před 3 lety +7

    At my elementary school, the big kids’ playground was adjacent to the parking lot. When it snowed, the plows would push huge piles of snow onto the edge of the soccer field. We LOVED making snow forts and stuff out of the snow piles.

  • @tezzanoia
    @tezzanoia Před rokem +7

    I grew up in a small ~ 600 people village and my parents house is halfway sorrounded by nature. They also have a big garden that was still in construction for most of my childhood, since we built that house and moved in when I was 3 and did all the landscaping in the garden ourselves over the years. This meant that various stages of the garden were amazing as a playground, way better than the actual village playground. And the nature around us was just as great to go on adventures, climb trees and have fun. Only real rule was to tell my parents roughly where we were going, so in case we didn't come back past a certain time, they'd know where to search for us

  • @MindinViolet
    @MindinViolet Před 5 lety +472

    "Safe" playgrounds aren't made for kids. They're made for litigious parents.

    • @MsBhappy
      @MsBhappy Před 4 lety +19

      But that's why playgrounds have signs saying supervise your children or the children in your care because the city is not liable for their protection

    • @pianojay5146
      @pianojay5146 Před 4 lety +7

      Agree. Playground these days are boring, they lack vandalism.

  • @deborahmcdaniel3984
    @deborahmcdaniel3984 Před 3 lety +2512

    “You are making kids build a playground” I’ve built a fort using the woods and a shovel. Don’t tell me what I do and don’t enjoy.

    • @user-dl3vn8ze9n
      @user-dl3vn8ze9n Před 3 lety +63

      Yeah!
      Also, the forts break and we get angry. Please tell me I'm not the only one!

    • @idkwhattoputhere8575
      @idkwhattoputhere8575 Před 3 lety +47

      In my town we did on some own farm it was so fun to do during the lockdown and we still use it even though most of us are like 16 or 15

    • @calebdonaldson8770
      @calebdonaldson8770 Před 3 lety +60

      Most kids love to build things, especially boys! How do you think Lego, Link n Logs, Mega Blocks, and Magnetix go so popular?

    • @justinekimdiomangay7775
      @justinekimdiomangay7775 Před 3 lety +34

      @@calebdonaldson8770 Minecraft too

    • @colem_h
      @colem_h Před 3 lety +15

      Pfft. Wood and shovel? Me and my brothers used to run into the forest, pull out a dead tree and make things using rocks and mud.

  • @HmmmmmLemmeThinkNo
    @HmmmmmLemmeThinkNo Před 2 lety +5

    There could also be a middle-ground with hard hats and a separate zone for very young kids. And there should also be a traditional playground nearby so it isn't the only option.
    But you could also do obstacle courses, gym elements (ie metal or plastic beams a foot off the ground), that kind of thing. More risk and more fun than a normal playground, but less than giving kids sharp and heavy objects with which to beat each other.
    Relatedly, plastic playgrounds are way more accessible to disabled kids (though usual not to kids using wheelchairs or walkers)

  • @anastasyagrigorieva4195
    @anastasyagrigorieva4195 Před 2 lety +10

    So true! When I was a kid, playgrounds weren't as interesting for me as my grandparents' summer house where I could build things and explore the nature around me. Yes, it did involve some splinters and accidentally hitting my fingers with a hammer (maybe a few times), but it was SO worth it!

  • @brynneknapp3478
    @brynneknapp3478 Před 3 lety +3489

    I remember in elementary school, they had a "safe" playground. We hated it and would usually play "crossy road" where we would try to run through the swings without getting hit by someone swinging. If you got hit, you had to switch them.

    • @unknowncj387
      @unknowncj387 Před 3 lety +177

      We did tht at my school too, it was the best when there were multiple classes out at once and the swings were fully loaded

    • @kevinbatdorf786
      @kevinbatdorf786 Před 3 lety +14

      Same!

    • @kevinbatdorf786
      @kevinbatdorf786 Před 3 lety +83

      I once got kicked in the head!

    • @kevinbatdorf786
      @kevinbatdorf786 Před 3 lety +45

      @@sugarfree6959 Who said I was complaining?😄

    • @ttthewolfgirl
      @ttthewolfgirl Před 3 lety +7

      Literally we did that to! It was like the chicken crossing the road

  • @cf1925
    @cf1925 Před 3 lety +1882

    And people wonder why kids like video games more than actually going outside.

    • @otherevan296
      @otherevan296 Před 3 lety +45

      T R U T H

    • @miraimin1
      @miraimin1 Před 3 lety +189

      No dad, it's not because I'm addicted. It's because I'm tired of you either yelling at me or hitting me for doing something slightly annoying.

    • @Adan6XI
      @Adan6XI Před 3 lety +3

      Sports...

    • @goode612
      @goode612 Před 3 lety +71

      That’s because it allows their imagination to run wild. Not cause they don’t have fun at a playground

    • @kiyoshi5430
      @kiyoshi5430 Před 3 lety +2

      @@miraimin1 relatable

  • @aross5035
    @aross5035 Před 3 lety +8

    There's one of those safe playgrounds at my elementary school, and when I was little one kid (probably 5th or 6th grade at the time) climbed on the roof and got stuck.
    Also, at our local children's garden, there's a think called the anarchy zone that's a lot like an adventure playground, but with no nails or bricks and a mud pit.

  • @amu5238
    @amu5238 Před 2 lety +3

    I’m an architecture student and I LOVE this series by vox. It’s produced and finished in such a graphically beautiful way that’s digestible and well researched. Thanks Vox!

  • @fish4973
    @fish4973 Před 5 lety +1963

    As a teenager I think this type of playground is really cool

    • @salty7535
      @salty7535 Před 5 lety +8

      @Carter Bohrer (Student) Well said

    • @fish4973
      @fish4973 Před 5 lety +2

      @InfectedGamez shhh they don't know that-

    • @fish4973
      @fish4973 Před 5 lety +7

      @N. Altime
      Whoa that sounds fun. If I did that at my school I'll get into a lot of trouble.

    • @pfinhulk6726
      @pfinhulk6726 Před 5 lety +6

      I think ours was for kids from around 8 to 18. And yes it was really cool, but it was kinda far away for me and school got hard so I seldom found time to go there...

    • @guyanaredbone5996
      @guyanaredbone5996 Před 5 lety +6

      InfectedGamez all throughout my teenage years which was just a few years ago, my friends and I would go hangout at the park and use the swings. It’s very common. There’s not a lot of free public spaces to go to other than parks.

  • @perman6647
    @perman6647 Před 3 lety +2264

    Kids playing with hammers and nails back in the days meanwhile now you get yelled at by picking up a rock like

    • @Juan-mw5tt
      @Juan-mw5tt Před 3 lety +137

      TIMMY PUT DOWN THAT ROCK!

    • @perman6647
      @perman6647 Před 3 lety +33

      @@zynel413 I’m neither of does :)

    • @ritzzzblitzz6833
      @ritzzzblitzz6833 Před 3 lety +43

      @@zynel413 wow stereotyping people, you've already lost the argument then.

    • @gialonn7599
      @gialonn7599 Před 3 lety +15

      @@Juan-mw5tt timmy: *throws rock at kid* happy now mum?

    • @Juan-mw5tt
      @Juan-mw5tt Před 3 lety +16

      @@gialonn7599 Proceeds to put child in the electric chair:

  • @TheRedTigon
    @TheRedTigon Před rokem +8

    looking at these adventure playgrounds makes me jealous I didn’t have that as a child- or even now, for that matter, as a young adult. i vividly remember one of the only fun things was climbing trees (this was against the rules and so the thrill would only last so long) and using a magnifying glass to light leaves on fire.

  • @celetial3287
    @celetial3287 Před rokem +4

    3:22 completely agree. my favorite thing to do on playgrounds was to climb up them on the outside. and traverse along them while i was up there

  • @persiyanapetrova6251
    @persiyanapetrova6251 Před 3 lety +1432

    I can understand the lack of adventure in kids. I babysit a 9 and 11 year old. All they do is play with iPads because they have no clue of what else to do. Parents constantly think everything is dangerous and kids only have one thing to satiate adventure, video games. Yet parents continue to complain about tech despite being the ones that prevent adventure. Anytime I visit Bulgaria, my home country allows kids starting from ages 7 to be out and hangout with kids their own age without parental vision, come to America and I rarely see kids outside and only see iPads and iPhones because that’s all any of us have known. It’s sad

    • @firemangan2731
      @firemangan2731 Před 3 lety +72

      Its mainly due to the human trafficking that happens here in the US that us american kids don’t have that much freedom to walk around with kids their own age.

    • @elodiedaoust3515
      @elodiedaoust3515 Před 3 lety +25

      @Jou T5 « over emotional women »? if parents are overly protective it’s because there’s a consensus between the mother and the father... what a disrespectful comment...

    • @secretmasculinity
      @secretmasculinity Před 3 lety +5

      Then please, live in Bulgaria. I know 99% of y'all wish you lived in the US the country of ACTUAL freedom.

    • @astcrace
      @astcrace Před 3 lety +50

      @@secretmasculinity wut

    • @lieutenanteclipse9975
      @lieutenanteclipse9975 Před 3 lety +64

      @@secretmasculinity get a load of this guy

  • @jackmehoff9927
    @jackmehoff9927 Před 4 lety +1620

    I remember when I was a kid we went to one of those safe playgrounds and we got bored so quickly that by the next day we had gone to the nearby woods and built a rope swing with my dad and to this day it is still there

    • @wereallpinkinside8452
      @wereallpinkinside8452 Před 4 lety +23

      aw that’s awesome!

    • @jackmehoff9927
      @jackmehoff9927 Před 4 lety +62

      @@wereallpinkinside8452 indeed it was. We built another,much bigger one but when we came back to it one day somebody had cut it down which is a shame because it wasn't just us who used it everyone loved it and in the summer there was queues of almost a dozen people waiting to swing

    • @therealicecat
      @therealicecat Před 4 lety +2

      @@jackmehoff9927 i want go there thou

    • @jackmehoff9927
      @jackmehoff9927 Před 4 lety +13

      @@therealicecat I went back there not long before the lockdown and unfortunately it had been cut down by a group of teenagers. I will try to make a new one after the lockdown and will post a video if I do

    • @isabellamayer6385
      @isabellamayer6385 Před 4 lety +1

      thats probably why everyone at my school fought over the tire swing

  • @Catsgirl32
    @Catsgirl32 Před 2 lety +10

    Oooh I used to see one of those adventure playgrounds next to the highway somewhere in the middle of our country, and I always felt so jealous of the kids who got to play there! I thought it was a scouts' area, but this was probably it instead. I still would love to go there and 'play', as a 20 year old. x) It just seemed (and still seems) so so so amazing and fun to be able to build things and explore others' builds!!