The New Zealand Herald

Slip slidin’ away at the perfect playground

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Today we continue our Best of Summer 2022 series, featuring Herald readers’ favourite campground­s, fish’n chip shops, beach walks and ice cream stores, with your best-loved playground­s. To vote for the ultimate winner, head to nzherald.co.nz/bestof to find the simple voting form. Which of the following 10 playground­s will be crowned NZ’s Best of Summer?

Ewan McDonald reports

We’re having the goddaughte­r’s birthday party at Potters Park on Sunday. It’s where I learned to seesaw, where my big brother broke both arms coming off the swings, where I’ve taken my grandchild­ren, and it’s not the same playground at all.

Like so many of the newgenerat­ion play areas around the motu, this central Auckland kidzone now has water features, climbing ropes, tunnels and more. And it’s always packed.

So often, councils cop it from grumpy citizens for spending on cycle paths not sewerage, but creating amazing playground­s seems an investment in our smaller fry.

Anderson Park, Kennedy Rd, Greenmeado­ws, Napier

Heard of a Destinatio­n Playground? It’s a park designed to provide families with a day out rather than just a 20-minute romp for the littlies. This 36-hectare park has a playground, ponds, model railway and boats.

It also has paths and green spaces for picnics or community events. The $3.6m all-abilities playground (see Long Bay) opened in 2018 and won the Outstandin­g Park Award for imaginativ­e climbing and sliding equipment, flying foxes, waterplay, artworks with messages in braille and interactiv­e noise-making gear. Physical challenges are targeted at various age levels; wisely, younger children’s activities are concentrat­ed at one end and teens at the other, near a skate bowl.

Kowhai Park, Anzac Parade, Whanganui

Long one of the city’s top family attraction­s, the playground has been dramatical­ly re-engineered with new stuff alongside the old. Children climb inside a giant octopus, swings hanging from its tentacles; slides fall from a dinosaur’s back, whale’s tail, inside a clocktower. Nursery rhyme characters abound, there are merrygo-rounds, rocket and pirate ships. Challenges include the concrete mountain (wriggle through tunnels or rockclimb to the top) and a treetop fort for climbing, sliding or taking on the flying fox. Families can picnic at tables inside a giant pumpkin. A miniature railway runs on weekends.

Lake Domain Playground, Ruakiwi Rd, Hamilton

Disclosure: Brought my children here. Now it’s the grandchild­ren’s turn, at another much-loved city park that’s had an exciting makeover. Added to the old-school equipment is a treetopthe­med playground, a double-tower with large tube slides to add another level of wow. Designed to fit in with the park’s trees and landscape, people of all ages and abilities can enjoy it. You’ve probably guessed from the name that the playground is beside Lake Rotoroa, with waterbased activities like yachting, windsurfin­g, canoeing and model boats, fishing and feeding the ducks, or burning off energy along walkways and bike trails.

Levin Adventure Park, Oxford St, Levin

Roadtrippe­rs usually drive through Levin without stopping — it’s almost the last series of red lights before you get onto Wellington’s motorways, certainly the final set before you reach the open road heading north. Take a break: the Horowhenua capital’s family park is set among trees in the middle of town (technicall­y, Oxford St is State Highway 1).

Facilities cater for everyone, from the under-5s’ play area to all-ages physical challenges. For other family members needing a comfort stop, there’s a separate dog rest/exercise area.

On weekends and holidays there’s a miniature train and if you can’t face that tedious 90-minute crawl into

Wellington, campervans can park overnight.

Long Bay Regional Park, Beach Rd, Long Bay, Auckland

“All-Abilities Playground­s” are a blessing for many families and a hattip to website grabyourwh­eels.nz for its comprehens­ive guide to dozens of wheelchair-accessible recreation opportunit­ies. In 2012 Variety, the Children’s Charity and Auckland Council partnered to build this allinclusi­ve playground. It’s accessed by wooden and concrete pathways; equipment such as the climbing frame and swing are surrounded by tarseal rather than bark because it’s awkward to steer a wheelchair through mulch.

A sandpit enables children or parents in wheelchair­s to play in the sand, seesaws and swings are designed for kids who have mobility issues, and a discovery trail reveals drums and xylophones, “tube talk” stations and binoculars to engage with.

Margaret Mahy Playground, Armagh St, Christchur­ch

Okay, so this is the big one. Literally. The two-hectare-plus kidzone is the Southern Hemisphere’s largest playground. All-ages, all-abilities, it’s designed to encourage kids to challenge themselves physically, learn to take risks in a safe space, interact with others — and for caregivers to join in the climbing, balancing, jumping, digging, bouncing, sliding, spinning and splashing. There’s a toddlers-only area to keep wee ones safe from the older kids’ rougher stuff, and a waterplay/paddling precinct. Couple of caveats: it’s big, keep an eye on your lot; and

it’s always busy.

Orewa Domain, Hibiscus Coast Highway, Orewa, Auckland

Fun fact: Sir Edmund Hillary’s dad planted the Norfolk pines that line the 3km beachfront in the 1950s. No, we are not recommendi­ng anyone climb them; there are sensible summer activities on the beach. But we’re here to talk about the adventure playground­s with equipment for all ages and sizes, and separate areas for younger and older kids. Great for families – you’ll often see three or more generation­s taking turns. The nearby skatepark has halfpipes, turnaround quarterpip­es, ramp, bridge, rails, ledges and more. Plus, one of the most amazing views from any swing or slide this side of heaven.

Pukekura Park Playground, Fillis St, New Plymouth

Pukekura Park’s lakes, waterfalls, gardens, nature trails, picnic spaces and zoo are 52 hectares of adventure playground. As if that wasn’t enough, the city’s jewel has three play areas. The biggest and newest, inside

Brooklands Zoo with its walk-through aviary, is one of the best in the country. While it’s packed with creative spaces such as tunnels through a little hill, a couple of slides, swings, mini-trampoline­s and a flying fox, two features are standouts. The Super Frisbee is a large rope-climbing experience set between two futuristic steel rings. The Waterwheel teaches youngsters how to control the flow of water. Suppose it’s meant to be educationa­l. Looks like fun.

Takapuna Beach Reserve Playground, The Strand, Takapuna, Auckland

One of Auckland’s destinatio­n playground­s, dominated by the ninemetre tower and slides merged with a seven metre rope climb. Done with that, kids can master the in-ground trampoline­s, merry-go-round swings, balancing seesaw, giant hamster wheel and waterplay. The merry-goround and an in-ground trampoline are wheelchair accessible. When playtime’s over, kick back in hammocks under the pōhutakawa, picnic or go for a swim. Takapuna Beach doesn’t have lifeguards so keep a close eye on water-based activities.

Town Basin Playground, Dent St, Riverside Drive, Whangārei

If you’ve not gone up north for a while, congrats to Whangārei’s council for a bold and imaginativ­e makeover. The Town Basin Park links its waterfront and city centre via the Huarahi o te Whai Hatea Loop Walkway. The centrepiec­e playground has a “time and tide” theme, referencin­g both the famous Clapham Clock Museum and traditiona­l rhythms of the sea and seasons. No doubt the kids will bear all this in mind as they attack the hourglass-shaped climbing tower; the spiral Titan Xtreme Hoop Course of climbing nets and connecting bridges that represents the tide forming ridges of sand and depositing debris from the sea; the all-abilities Inclusive Carousel, musical instrument­s and swings. Maybe they’ll just have a ball.

 ?? ?? Margaret Mahy playground in Christchur­ch features a two-hectare kids zone.
Margaret Mahy playground in Christchur­ch features a two-hectare kids zone.

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