Questions? +1 (202) 335-3939 Login
Trusted News Since 1995
A service for global professionals · Tuesday, July 23, 2024 · 729,863,795 Articles · 3+ Million Readers

AS THE ADA TURNS 34, PENNSYLVANIA TOWNS ARE GOING BEYOND ITS REQUIREMENTS TO BUILD UNIVERSAL DESIGN INTO NEW PLAYGROUNDS

The communication board at Warminster's new playground helps children who are non-verbal access the playground.

Parents of children who are nonverbal appreciate the communication board at Warminster's new community playground.

Two girls learn ASL using equipment at Warminster's new playground

Children learn ASL on equipment at Warminster's new playground

good for PA logo

There is so much good for everyone in Pennsylvania's parks

New Playgrounds Encourage Play Between Children With and Without Disabilities and Address the Needs of All Children, Including Those Who Are Neurodivergent

Parks and Recreation professionals are at the forefront of bringing Universal Design to playgrounds, informed by their interaction with children with differing abilities through the programs they run.”
— Dan Hendey, Sr. Education Manager, Pennsylvania Recreation & Park Society
STATE COLLEGE, PA, UNITED STATE, July 23, 2024 /EINPresswire.com/ -- Within hours of cutting the ribbon for the new playground at Warminster Community Park in Bucks County, PA, in May, the community’s Facebook page lit up with posts by parents grateful for the communication board. The board, an Augmentative and Alternative Communication (ACC) tool using pictures and symbols to assist with non-verbal communication, suggested by a local speech pathologist, created a way for their nonverbal children to access the playground and play with other children.

Historically, inclusivity on the playground catered only to physical access for children with orthopedic disabilities, leaving out a vast number of children. Warminster’s new playground is emblematic of the evolution of inclusive play and greater recognition of neurodiversity.

As America celebrates the 34th anniversary of the groundbreaking Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) this month, playgrounds like this one go far beyond the basic requirements of the ADA by building in Universal Design.

Universal Design means planning and building playgrounds that serve every child’s needs in one place, while creating multiple opportunities for interaction between children with and without disabilities.

The CDC ranks Americans with disabilities as the largest minority group in the country. About 1:6 children in the United States have one or more developmental disabilities.

“Parks and Recreation professionals are at the forefront of bringing Universal Design to playgrounds, informed by their level of interaction with children with differing abilities through the myriad programs they run in communities,” said Dan Hendey, CPRE, CPSI,Senior Education Manager, Pennsylvania Recreation & Park Society.

“Our team has experience with children with a wide range of disabilities through our camp,” said Jessica Fox, director of Warminster’s Parks & Recreation Department. “With this insight, we already knew the old inclusion model of just wheelchair ramps wouldn’t serve the vast needs of all of the children in our community. Our new playground was intentionally designed to create interaction while also providing spaces for children to retreat as needed, based on their individual needs.

It shows children what they have in common and allows them to have fun together instead of focusing on their differences. The result is definitely not a stand in line and go down the slide playground.”

According to Landscape Structures, when playgrounds are built with everyone in mind, it sends a message to the community that everyone is meant to be there, that everyone matters and everyone is meant to play.

Children with disabilities can have different needs for their play, such as more or less sensory input; however, playground play is critical for all children’s cognitive and physical development, supporting socialization, creativity and community building.

About two hours due west of Warminster, near Harrisburg, PA, Upper Allen Township Parks & Recreation just became the first public park system in Pennsylvania to earn designation as a Certified Autism Center (CAC). This designation relates to staff training and the department’s commitment to providing accessible spaces that encourage inclusivity. Every member of the township’s parks and recreation department has been trained through this certification.

“We now have the ability to identify if someone is on the spectrum, which helps us understand their behavior and how to approach them in the best way,” says Upper Allen Township Parks Director Chad Krebs. “When we recently closed one of our playgrounds, we had to think about how to support a boy with autism who swung there every day. We decided to leave his swing up until the new playground opened, so he wouldn’t lose that important part of his daily routine.”

The township recently opened an interactive sensory garden behind one of its flagship playgrounds, Winding Hill Park North. The natural area, envisioned as a reprieve from potential overload on the playground, features five sections, one catered to each sense. Lush with more than 600 plants, it includes fruit trees and bushes in the taste area, tall grasses that crackle in the wind and bird feeders and bird houses for sound, and both prickly and soft, fuzzy plants for touch. Its benches face away from other people to offer lessened stimulation, while the entire area sits in the sightline of parents on the playground for security.

“With the sensory garden and every new project, inclusivity is the first thing we think about when we start out,” says Krebs. “We look at the project from every angle to determine whether it’s accessible to all.”

Parents in Pennsylvania can now use PRPS’s Park Finder app to find inclusive playgrounds near them. Parents anywhere in the U.S. can find the closest accessible playground with Let Kids Play’s Accessible Playground Directory.

Rachel Ezekiel-Fishbein
Making Headlines Public Relations
+1 267-679-2463
email us here
Visit us on social media:
Facebook
X
LinkedIn
Instagram

Powered by EIN Presswire


EIN Presswire does not exercise editorial control over third-party content provided, uploaded, published, or distributed by users of EIN Presswire. We are a distributor, not a publisher, of 3rd party content. Such content may contain the views, opinions, statements, offers, and other material of the respective users, suppliers, participants, or authors.

Submit your press release