Foto: Matt Green |
Hi Marcus,
can you tell us a bit more about Playground Ideas and the inspiration behind
the organization?
Playground
Ideas’ goal is to support anyone, anywhere with the resources to create a
stimulating place for play to fight the lifelong effects of poor early
childhood development. Playground Ideas has already helped over 1455
communities in 85 countries, impacting an estimated 700,000 children.
10 years
ago, I was living on the Thai-Burma border when a local NGO asked if I would
help them build a playground. Throwing together a design and a crew of
volunteers, we set to work. Before we finished that first playground, the
headmaster of a neighbouring school asked if we could help them do the same. And
so it began. Requests began pouring in and over the next two years a rag-tag
gang of volunteers, artists, and makers built 40 playgrounds along the
Thai-Burma border. That’s when Playground Ideas began and our open source
website of playground resources was created.
Playground
Idea’s imaginative designs, based around locally available materials, help
transform the landscape of this Thai village.
How can
playgrounds improve early stage childhood development?
Right now,
a staggering 43% of children under five years of age in low and middle income
countries are failing to reach their full developmental potential. Two-thirds
of primary age children in the developing world are failing to meet the minimum
benchmarks of learning after four years of school. It is estimated that the
result of poor early development can lead to a 30% loss of adult productivity
every year.
SketchUp enables us to
share our designs with people regardless of the language they speak or the
country they live in. Anyone with access to a computer and an internet
connection can see our designs and start building.
The good
news is that longitudinal studies conducted over the last 50 years have shown
that early childhood play-based programs can have huge impacts on the education
and long-term life impacts of children living in poverty. We believe that
communities across the globe already have the resources and skills to create
amazing play spaces. What they need is support in the form of ideas, designs
and a bit of technical know-how. This is where Playground Ideas comes in.
The Tire
Octopus is a favorite from the Playground Ideas catalog. It’s been replicated
in countless playgrounds around the world and is always a huge hit with the
kids!
The number
of communities your projects have impacted in the past decade are absolutely
astonishing! How has SketchUp enabled you to scale your reach with such a small
team?
SketchUp
has been foundational to Playground Ideas and to our core concept of empowering
local people using local materials to create the changes they want to see in
their communities. All of our designs are first created in SketchUp and then we
use those files to develop step-by-step building plans. SketchUp enables us to
share our designs with people regardless of the language they speak, or the
country they live in. Anyone with access to a computer and an internet
connection can see our designs and start building.
Your
strategy for creating play spaces is centered around using locally available
materials and construction skills. How does SketchUp allow you to draw on the
creative talents of local project coordinators?
All of our
designs and playground elements are designed to be built by communities
themselves, using locally sourced materials that are recycled or low cost, and
easily available. We deliberately keep the designs fairly generic so that
readers can fill in the gaps with their knowledge of materials.
One issue
we found is that it’s difficult for some people to visualize architectural
plans and how their space will actually appear. SketchUp allows us to provide
accurate visual representations of designs using materials such as tires,
pipes, bamboo, and steel drums that people are familiar with. This enables
people to not only replicate the designs but gives them the foundation to come
up with their own creative solutions after they get the basic idea in their
heads.
In response
to this need you have created a design process that seems to be centered around
the notion of play. Can you tell us about the playground design tool on your
website?
Our aim is
to provide all the resources needed for anyone to create their own play space. We
want to provide our users with a tool that allows them to create a professional
site plan of their playground as easily as possible. For many of our users,
even a tool as simple as SketchUp is too complex for them to learn when they’re
only going to create one project.
Playground
Idea’s Unity-based design tool allows users to populate their construction site
with SketchUp models of playground elements
Our first
tool was a paper-based cut and paste playground designer which is still
available from our website. We then created a digital version of this manual
which was never robust enough to launch. After working with the amazing
volunteers at Random Hacks of Kindness (RHoK) we worked out a way to combine
the power of SketchUp with the Unity game engine and - boom! Anyone can now use
our 3D playground design game to create a full playground plan in minutes.
You
mentioned that you try to incorporate traditional games and methods of play in
your projects. What is the most unique playground element or game you have
seen?
One of the
most unique play spaces we helped to design was in the grounds of the Ruben
Centre, a primary school for 2,000 kids in the Mukuru slum of Nairobi, Kenya.
Designs focused on facilitating imaginative, yet practical play rooted in the
real life surroundings of the students’ lives and the life skills the community
was working to instill in these children.
Many of the
children had experienced illness so we added a mini hospital and pharmacy area.
This was based on the idea that children could explore their current reality
from different perspectives through role play, which can be very healing, and
allows children to better understand their current situation.
This is
pretty darn inspiring. What can the SketchUp community do to get involved?
At Playground
Ideas our goal is to keep play free which is why funding from our generous
sponsors and individual public donations matter. 100% of public donations go
towards supporting our global community of DIY play makers. We’d love if the
SketchUp community could donate even just $1 each to Playground Ideas so we can
continue to expand global access to play.
We’re also
always on the lookout for volunteer interns who can come up with new,
interesting designs that can be added to our design library, and used by people
in communities all over the world.
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