The key to running a successful children's playground lies in understanding children's behavioral characteristics and psychological needs, and considering age-appropriate play products for different developmental stages of children.
Children aged 1-3 usually play alone and engage in recognition through touch, sight, and sound. This stage is suitable for playing with sand, clay, water, swings, and slides.
Children aged 3-6 begin to develop social awareness and play in groups, enjoying symbolic play and abstract toys, as well as chairs, tables, slides, and mobile facilities.
Children aged 6-8 enjoy testing their flexibility on complex structures like climbing nets that evoke different motor responses.
Children aged 8-10 prefer to demonstrate their balance and coordination on more complex climbing facilities.
Eyes are the windows through which children recognize the world, and color is an essential element of the world. Traditional playgrounds that fail to effectively trigger children's interest can be enhanced by the combination of red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple, which are more likely to capture a child's attention. Therefore, when designing outdoor unpowered playgrounds, it is important to fully consider the use of color to create a safe and attractive play environment.