Parks & Playgrounds Use Synthetic Turf to Help Promote Childhood Fitness
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
ATLANTA, GA – In reporting that about 17% of children and adolescents
are obese, the Centers
for Disease Control notes that the lack of safe, appealing places for kids
to play or be active is a major problem in many communities. Determined to
reverse this trend, a growing number of parks and playgrounds are installing
synthetic turf to help youth be active year-round.
"Parks and playgrounds featuring synthetic turf create safe,
accessible and resilient playing surfaces for kids with a diversity of needs –
the same surfaces that elite athletes play on,” noted Rick Doyle, President of
the Synthetic Turf
Council. "The opportunity to increase physical activity is critical for the
fitness, well-being and self-esteem of youth.”
Synthetic turf promotes inclusive recreation for kids with
disabilities and physical challenges since wheelchairs roll easily and crutches
won’t sink into park surfaces. In 2009, the City of Lakeland Parks &
Recreation Department in Lakeland, Florida opened Common
Ground, its first playground featuring unique play experiences for children
of varying physical and cognitive abilities. Serving over 17,000 children, the
innovative park features over 25,000 square feet of synthetic turf play zones. Taylor’s Dream
Boundless Playground in Fort Wayne, Indiana opened in June 2011 after years
of grassroots fundraising to offer amazing play opportunities for children with
and without disabilities. Both parks feature an accessible, ASTM safety-rated surface
called Playground Grass created
by ForeverLawn.
"We have some fabulous facilities -- but this synthetic
grass sets our Boundless Playground apart from all the others!” said Sarah
Nichter of the Fort Wayne Parks & Recreation Department. "Not only
beautiful, it also gives children and adults with disabilities the chance to
play with their peers. I believe this type of surfacing will become a standard
for many playgrounds in the future."
Parks are able to significantly increase capacity and
conserve millions of gallons of water annually by using synthetic turf, like
the Athenia Steel Recreation Complex in Clifton, New Jersey. Vacant for many years after a defunct steel
company closed, the environmentally challenged land was cleaned-up and reclaimed
in April 2011. Today the Complex features three multi-purpose synthetic turf
fields by AstroTurf® that provide unprecedented
opportunities for youth soccer, football and lacrosse programs.
Schools with synthetic grass playgrounds are seeing a
difference too. Located in an economically challenged area with a concrete
playground, students at John
Wister Elementary School in Philadelphia were often in the nurse’s office
with scrapes and other injuries. According to Principal Donna Smith, test
scores increased by 20%, kids’ self-esteem skyrocketed, and parental
involvement increased after the synthetic turf play area and field was
installed in 2010. A new playground at Chinle Elementary School in Chinle,
Arizona, the latest in a series of facility improvements being made at Navajo
Nation schools, has been embraced by students and faculty. Since more than 30% of
the Navajo population is diabetic, the ForeverLawn playground comes at a time
when many are stressing the importance of exercise on the reservation. While many homeowners have turned to synthetic grass for
aesthetic reasons and to conserve water, their kids are also benefitting from
more durable backyard play spaces. Just
ask five- year-old twins Makenzie and Makayla Creasey of Lexington, North
Carolina. Their family, spotlighted in a
January, 2010 episode of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition” following their mom’s
courageous battle with colon cancer, received a beautiful new home. But the
twins were most enthusiastic about their new, state-of-the-art synthetic grass
playground area donated and installed by Synthetic Grass Warehouse.
About the Synthetic Turf Council
Based
in Atlanta, the
Synthetic Turf Council was founded in 2003 to promote the industry and to
assist buyers and end users with the selection, use and maintenance of
synthetic turf systems in sports field, golf, municipal parks, airports,
landscape and residential applications. The organization is also a
resource for current, credible, and independent research on the safety and
environmental impact of synthetic turf. Membership includes builders,
landscape architects, testing labs, maintenance providers, manufacturers,
suppliers, installation contractors, infill material suppliers and other
specialty service companies. For more information, visit www.syntheticturfcouncil.org.
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