Archive for category Safety News & Tips

Safety Surfacing

Many of you in the playground profession must scratch you head at why surfacing is 4”-10” lower than when it was installed in the play area. This goes for all surfacing material wood chips, pea gravel, sand, except rubber nuggets and hard surfacing. The three mentioned surfaces all settle and erode.

Wood chips decompose creating bacterial activity that promotes a peat material at its base giving it the cushion. As it decomposes and settles the maintenance staff needs to reapply material around the play equipment to maintain acceptable safety levels.

Pea Gravel while it will act like marble when first placed in a play area will erode significantly. This constant grinding of stones and water will pulverize the gravel creating hard cement like material under the pea gravel. The impact attenuation will perform admirably when first placed in service. Not for long the activity placed on the surface will cause erosion and settling creating a very hard surface just under the surface.  The safety risk to the children is considerably increased.  My suggestion is for the staff to use equipment to break up these solids or replace the surfacing with a more acceptable product. I find that pea gravel is an adult’s reaction to cost concerns as opposed to overwhelming negative characteristics of the product and higher risk factors than any of the alternative surfacing products.

Sand has different properties. Sand will mainly compact, while it will erode and settle providing less impact attenuation than when initially installed it will not get rock hard and will always provide some level of safety.  Because there is erosion and settling occurring such as wind storms, rain, and people playing on the surface it will get compacted and provide less volume. To resolve these issues your staff needs to fluff the sand with a machine or by hand, and add more sand around play equipment. Children love sand. It squishes, builds, has texture and is cool in the summertime, all aspects that make it interesting to children.  I have found they enjoy this material better than all the other surfacing materials. Yes it is dirty, yes cats think of it as a large litter box and older un-American deviants will break bottles and the debris will remain in the sand. However, all these issues can be attended to by good maintenance practices. If you have ever watched a child fall on their head from 5’-6’ you will agree sand is a high performing safety surface after that child walks away with only a tear in their eye.

I will address rubber surfacing products in the future.

Thank you

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KEEP YOUR CHILDREN SAFE

A Quick Checklist for Parents

Place this list in a prominent area of your home for quick reference. Then, before your children head out the door for the playground, check that:

Supervision is present, but strings and ropes aren’t.
Adult presence is needed to watch for potential hazards, observe, intercede and facilitate play when necessary. Strings on clothing or ropes used for play can cause accidental strangulation if caught on equipment.

All children play on age-appropriate equipment.
Preschoolers, ages 2 – 5, and children, ages 5 – 12, are developmentally different and need different equipment located in separate areas to keep the playground safe and fun for all.

Falls to surface are cushioned.
Nearly 70 percent of all playground injuries are related to falls to the surface. Acceptable surfaces include hardwood fiber/mulch, pea gravel, sand and synthetic materials such as poured-in-place, rubber mats or tiles. Playground surfaces should not be concrete, asphalt, grass, blacktop, packed dirt or rocks.

Equipment is safe.
Check to make sure the equipment is anchored safely in the ground, all equipment pieces are in good working order, S-hooks are entirely closed, bolts are not protruding, there are no exposed footings, etc.

Safety checklists are available from the CPSC or the National Program for Playground Safety.

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