Saturday, June 20, 2015

Play-Scapes


Taylor Cullity Lethlean Playgrounds


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The Australian firm of Taylor Cullity Lethlean is getting alot of internet attention for their new ‘Pod Playground’  at the National Arboretum in Canberra.  Starting with the obvious idea of seeds, it tilts surfaces and exaggerates scales (ala Monstrum’s designs)  in a slick 1.7 million construct, but my favorite feature is actually the wavy-edge used on the paths and steps.    TCL  has an interesting body of playground work that reads like a recent-history of architectural play design, beginning with an adventure/nature playground at the Quarries in Yarra constructed in 1992, well before it was cool to use stumps and rocks.  Their innovative Carlton Playground (2000) was a postmodern interpretation of a garden maze, and one of the first posts on this blog!    The Junior School Playground in Melbourne (2002) revisited the ideas of walls as play features in a more confined and younger space, and their intergenerational City Playscape in Adelaide (2009) is a climbable, sittable boneyard of concrete that still meets all safety standards for a ‘normal’ playground.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

What is Play Rochester?


Play Rochester ~ Purpose ~ 

To strengthen the role of play in order to build strong foundations of physical and social development and mental health; to encourage Rochester NY to host a national conference such as the Institute of Play or the International Play Association http://ipaworld.org as Rochester is the home of the National Museum of Play/Strong Museum; to highlight experts in children's play and its expression such as Dr. Brian Sutton-Smith, First Lady Michelle Obama ~ Let's Move; photographer Steve McCurry; and to build relationships with area agencies and institutions which support safe children's play; to work to reveal the role of photography plays to express the essence of play to wider audiences; and to support the experience of play in playgrounds, parks and backyards.


Contact ~ playrochester@gmail.com


Facebook ~ https://www.facebook.com/play.rochester


Blog ~ http://playrochesternow.blogspot.com


Twitter ~ https://twitter.com/PlayRochester

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Dr. Brian Sutton-Smith, Professor of Play

Just about the most fascinating thinker and writer and historian of children's play and its implications in child and brain development ever! His papers have been donated to the National Museum of Play/Brian Sutton-Smith Library and Archives of Play at the Strong Museum in Rochester NY. In his book, The Ambiguity of Play [1997 Harvard Univ. Press], he focuses on play's "quirkiness, redundancy and flexibility suggesting that play might provide a model of the variability that allows for natural selection. As a form of mental feedback, play might nullify the rigidity that sets in after successful adaptation, thus reinforcing animal and human variability."  This sweeping theory is an incredible contribution to human development, neuroscience and an understanding of the human condition. ~ Barbara Carder