The public value of child-friendly space : Reconceptualising the playground
Purpose The playground is a commonly advised means to integrate children into the public realm of “child-friendly cities”, yet research has tended not to examine it in relation to adjacent public space. This paper aims to understand the extent to which the playground – a socio-spatial phenomenon – facilitates children's integration into the public realm, enabling critical examination of the “child-friendly space” concept. Design/methodology/approach An ethnographic study was carried out across three sites in Athens, Greece, where typical neighbourhood playgrounds replicate features common across the global north. Methods combined observation (167 h; morning, afternoon, evening), visual-mapping and 61 semi-structured interviews with 112 playground users (including adults and children from the playgrounds and surroundings). Rigorous qualitative thematic analysis, involving an iterative post-coding process, allowed identification of spatial patterns and emergent themes. Findings Findings reveal perceptions surrounding the protective and age-specific aspects of child-friendly design, limit the playgrounds' public value. However, a paradox emerges whereby the playgrounds' adjacency to public spaces designed without child-friendly principles affords children's engagement with the public realm. Research limitations/implications Reconceptualisation of the “child-friendly playground” is proposed, embracing interdependence with the public realm – highly significant for child-friendly urban design theory and practice globally. Researchers are encouraged to compare findings in other geographical contexts. Originality/value This original finding is enabled by the novel approach to studying the playground in relation to adjacent public realm. The study also offers the first empirical examination of child-friendly city principles – participation in social life and urban play – in a Greek context, addressing a geographical gap in literature on children's everyday spaces.
Year of publication: |
2020
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Authors: | Pitsikali, Alkistis ; Parnell, Rosie ; McIntyre, Lesley |
Published in: |
Archnet-IJAR: International Journal of Architectural Research. - Emerald Publishing Limited, ISSN 1938-7806, ZDB-ID 2433361-X. - Vol. 14.2020, 2, p. 149-165
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Publisher: |
Emerald Publishing Limited |
Subject: | Playground | Child-friendly city | Athens | Ethnography | Public value | Public realm |
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