Children's Play Areas Design Guide

Children's Play Areas Design Guide
Author: National Playing Fields Association (Great Britain)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 96
Release: 1995
Genre: Play environments
ISBN:

Based on recent advice from the National Playing Fields Association, this edition assists property managers, their works service managers and their establishment works consultants in tackling responsibilities for children's play provision. The book focuses on MOD sites within the UK and overseas, and acts as one of the main publications to be used in relation to children's play provision within MOD areas.

Design for Play

Design for Play
Author: Aileen Shackell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 150
Release: 2008
Genre: Play
ISBN: 9781847752253

Nurseries: A Design Guide

Nurseries: A Design Guide
Author: Mark Dudek
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2013-08-06
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 113514401X

Architecture can inspire young children; the very shape and form of a daycare center can not only stimulate their imagination but can help children form strong relationships and help promote development. This design guide presents all the elements of building design that combine to create the very best environment for young children and the people who work with them, including building materials, multi-functional spaces and design scaled to suit small children.

Designing Streets for Kids

Designing Streets for Kids
Author: National Association of City Transportation Officials
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2019-12-12
Genre: Streets
ISBN: 9781642830712

Building on the success of their Global Street Design Guide, the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO)-Global Designing Cities Initiative (GDCI) Streets for Kids program has developed child-focused design guidance to inspire leaders, inform practitioners, and empower communities around the world to consider their city from the eyes of a child. The guidance in Designing Streets for Kids captures international best practices, strategies, programs, and policies that cities around the world have used to design streets and public spaces that are safe and appealing to children from their earliest days. The guidance also highlights tactics for engaging children in the design process, an often-overlooked approach that can dramatically transform how streets are designed and used.

Spaces for Young Children, Second Edition

Spaces for Young Children, Second Edition
Author: Mark Dudek
Publisher: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Total Pages: 133
Release: 2012-09-24
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1907969977

Good architecture combines the practical with a sense of delight in the spaces that make up a building. If designed skilfully, a buildingcan inspire and help to make children’s experience of their early years care a secure yet varied one.Many childcare professionals understand the importance of architecture in ensuring good provision for young children and theirfamilies. Whether making minor modifications to an existing facility, embarking on major term improvements, or a new construction, this book will empower early years professionals to work with building professionals to create the best space for young children. It looks at the big things, but more importantly suggests the smaller features that can provide an educationally stimulating environment.Drawing on experience in the UK and Europe, this new edition aims to ensure that advances in children’s architecture will be wellinformed. It has been revised throughout and includes an overview of recent developments, legal compliance, consulting with children,building for communities, local involvement and achieving high quality builds with small budgets.

Children's Spaces

Children's Spaces
Author: Mark Dudek
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2012-05-04
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1136421947

This collection of essays is concerned with the experiences children have within the supervised worlds they inhabit, as well as with architecture and landscape architecture. International examples of innovative childcare practice are illustrated together with the design processes which informed their development. The emphasis here is on new and experimental childcare projects which set-out to reassert the rights of children to participate in a complex multi-faceted world, which is no longer available to them, unless under adult supervision. Research supports in depth recommendations regarding the ideal children's environment, across a range of contexts and dimensions. Until recent times, the needs of children within the urban environment were largely ignored. There is little tradition and no broadly agreed contemporary architectural or landscape theory as to how children should be provided for, beyond a limited functional agenda. There is a sense that architecture for childhood is not taken seriously; it is either whimsical and ephemeral or largely designed for adults, an adjunct to the more important business of adult needs and aspirations. Yet children access much of their education and development through play and social interaction with their childhood counterparts. The spaces in and around children"s daycare centres, schools, supervised parks and other dedicated children"s environments are the subject of this collection. As more and more purpose designed buildings and gardens for children are opened, the need to listen to children and their carers is becoming more aparant. Mark Dudek gathers together a number of internationally recognized experts in the field of childcare environments to write about different aspects of the landscape. They have been chosen in particular because of their background in enquiring, research orientated work, both theoretical and practical. They listen to and watch children. Contributors have considered the child"s environment as one which is secure and controlled yet offers additional environmental dimensions which extend developmental possibilities. Children often spend a great deal of time in daycare facilties and schools, as parents are absorbed in their own work and leisure activities. This places an emphasis on architects and planners to consider the needs of children in great detail. As such, the children"s environment must be conceived of as a rich, complex place; a "world within a world". We use the word LANDSCAPE in recognition that children do not differentiate between the inside and the outside, private and public; every part of their perception is open to stimulation by a stimulating environment.