
Architect
David Rockwell of Rockwell Group Architecture and Design and the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation today announced plans to create Imagination Playground, a paradigm shift in the community playground, at Burling Slip in the South Street Seaport area, as part of a public/private collaboration. The playground is designed to be more in-line with the way child development experts suggest children naturally play and is a destination where kids will be able to do what they love best: invent, explore and dream.
David Rockwell, scenic designer for the upcoming Legally Blonde also designed the sets for "Hairspray" (Tony, Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle nominations), "The Rocky Horror Show" (Drama Desk Nomination), "All Shook Up" (Drama Desk Nomination), "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels," and, for film, "Team America." He is the founder of Rockwell Group, the New York-based architecture and design firm. Projects include the Kodak Theatre, W Union Square, Nobu, Phantom at the Venetian Theater in Las Vegas and the JetBlue terminal at JFK International Airport. David is included in the Interior Design magazine's Hall of Fame. Spectacle, a book by David Rockwell with Bruce Mau, was published by Phaidon last fall.
Imagination Playground is a complement to more conventional outdoor play spaces. It has three key components: an open multi-level space with large sand and water features; a huge array of "loose parts", essentially toys and tools; and play workers, trained staff on site who facilitate children's play. Rockwell Group and the City worked with experts in the fields of play, including Roger Hart, co-director of The Children's Environments Research Group (www.cerg1.org) and professor of environmental psychology at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, and Susan Solomon, author of American Playgrounds: Revitalizing Community Space, to design Imagination Playground as a place to enhance a child's play experience by creating an environment that is interactive, engaging and constantly transformed.
"It was an incredible experience to collaborate with our partners at the Parks Department," said David Rockwell, CEO of Rockwell Group. "We are proud to be at the forefront of a growing movement in the U.S. to shift the way we think about children's play. And as a creative firm that exists to create places for people to gather and share experiences, as well as for me as a father, it was truly exciting to turn our attention to a less well served group: children."
"We were very excited when the Rockwell Group approached us about working together to create a new template for children's play in the City. This project meets two goals encouraged by Mayor Bloomberg: innovative design and creative public-private partnerships to improve parks," said Adrian Benepe, Commissioner of New York City Department of Parks & Recreation. "We viewed the Burling Slip site at the Seaport as an ideal location, given its status as an iconic family destination and a booming residential district. This project could well put New York City once again at the cutting edge of urban playground design and create a replicable model for programming innovative children's play."
Over the last decade, the South Street Seaport residential population has swelled more than thirty-five percent. More than 15,000 apartments are being added to the area, drawing a growing number of families with children under nine, the age group Imagination Playground is meant to serve.
Given that the playground is located at the Seaport, Rockwell Group's design captures Burling Slip's rich maritime and commercial history and engages the messy vitality that characterizes New York City's dynamic waterfront, with elements such as climbing ropes and a lookout ramp with telescopes. The built landscape also incorporates amphitheater seating and a multi-level "crow's nest" that has a double function as storage for loose parts.
The Imagination Playground is designed to suggest options and provides a flexible armature for many types of play, rather than prescribed activities. In its place are the raw materials of creativity and sensory exploration, including sand and water, as well as play props, including building blocks, buckets, shovels, wheelbarrows, and other safe tools that facilitate children's play. These elements will enable children to play in an intuitive way: build something, tear it down, and start all over again.