To play and infect it with a healthy bit danger, Archipelag playscape A thoughtful structure is designed by Szczęsny And Karolina Potbskain collaboration with Rainer StadbuarFor Kinder Kunst LaborA wooden and concrete museum at the center of Ultoon Park in St. Polen, Austria. Designers were tasked to creating a multi-sensory indoor play area, who used to meet young children, who also addressed the continuous tendency to secure this type of space. Designers asked themselves: “How far can we go to make space at least from possible risks?” Children need to take some risk to create confidence, yet they should also be given space to do so. Developing the necessary skills in this process, the archipelago playscape is an ideal place to be wild.
Constant monitoring and overshadling have left the children of soft parenting generations who are somewhat uninterrupted for tests and tribulations that we can cope with adults. Tolerance window There is a neurocystic model that describes the best condition of stimulation in which we are able to live our life the best life. Small stents are normal in hypoersal (shutdown, freeze state) and hypersoral (anarchy, heavy) because we navigate life, yet spending too long in these states can lead to neurological changes that affect our lives. Archipelago playscape exists very neatly within this spectrum, providing considering areas and functions that we will not look normally.
Children create fine motor skills, self-trusts, imagination skills and more through experimenting in the physical world. As for them a lot of new, practice is necessary, creates a mass of data points that will shape their understanding of the world. Without a diverse experience, the children will naturally become frightened, or inadvertently engaged in risky behaviors later in life, unaware of the results. Additional precautions were taken to ensure that the children are a little careful when navigating the wood structure, the maximum height of 47 inches and angle does not exceed 15%. And yet, it still seems to be welcome, fun and open, not interested in leading children through a set, prescribed path. A semi-mat finish gives it a little grip, but not too much, allows children to navigate different aircraft similar to the natural area.
Archipelago Playscape offers a crowd of other fun activities – as well as a “ropes of ropes” is characterized by a composition of thick ropes that promotes motor skills, and a large bowl full of space sand that allows children to test tact. A set of steel profiles on the wall mimics a waterfall, which promotes cool and provides hearing reaction, and a three-tie-tier ramp with a high space allows a hidden-hidden-outside-outside to retreat and feel safe.
Szczęsny There is a storyteller and designer located in Warsaw who finds the field of art and its applications more enough for stories than architecture. Exhibition designs and interiors like interiors, working in secondary, fabric and furniture design, he recognizes the importance of relevant analysis and underlying humanity in any design-related work.
Karolina Poteka is a designer dedicated to the cultural and sociological background of a space. Local reference is everything, reflects different meanings in materiality and thought. Installation of its own studio in 2020 has given its unique insight into its comprehensive approach, allowing it to complete multi -disciplinary projects equally for private customers and public institutions.
To learn more about Archiplag Playscape, travel szcz.com.pl,
Photography by Patrick Johanssen, Max Cropitz and Jakub szczęsny.