Welcome 2014!
The Holiday Wine Raffle was very successful. Thank you again to the families who donated wine for the raffle prizes and to those who sold booklets of tickets as well as those who really just wanted to win some wine! Together we managed to raise almost $4300 for the playground.
We also have some exciting news to share - our application for a City of Winnipeg Community Incentive Grant was approved for $20,000!! The application was submitted in October and approved in December. We have also applied for Community Places funding, and will find out about that grant in April.
RHS Playground Enhancement Project
Monday, 13 January 2014
Monday, 21 October 2013
Post Extreme Recess 2 - you did it!
We will have some photos up soon, but I wanted to thank everyone who registered for Extreme Recess this time around. We raised just over $2400!! While we had many returning participants from the last one, we also had a lot of new faces, which was great. It was cool and the events were mostly done in the dark, but that didn't seem to curb everyone's enthusiasm.
A few more thanks are in order:
- the school for supporting the event
- the team of teachers who came out on their own time to show their support
- the volunteer babysitters from River Heights Junior High as well as their many helpers from grades 5 and 6
- John Orlikow for coming to cheer everyone on
- Julie-Anne McCallum for the post-workout protein bars
- Brent Campbell for organizing and leading the fitness events
- Shawn Flaman for leading us in a much needed post-workout yoga session
- Holly Glew for hosting a fabulous after-party
And a HUGE thank-you to the many organizations who provided the little incentives and the larger prizes that I hope you are enjoying.
See you at the next event.
Sponsors:
Brian R. Coughlin, CFP, CIM
Vice-President, Business Development
400-1780 Wellington Avenue
Winnipeg, Manitoba
R3H1B3
Ph: (204) 783-0716
Sushi California
Saucer's Cafe
Monday, 9 September 2013
Extreme Recess 2
We had such great feedback on the first Extreme Recess that we are planning a fall event!! Mark your calendars for:
When: Friday, October 18 from 6-8 pm
Where: Robert H Smith playground
While you may not be able to do this... your kids will love watching you do this:
Come out and "play" in support of the Robert H. Smith Playground Enhancement Project. The team fitness activities and post-workout yoga will leave you feeling terrific. Click on Extreme Recess Registration to register now!
When: Friday, October 18 from 6-8 pm
Where: Robert H Smith playground
While you may not be able to do this... your kids will love watching you do this:
Come out and "play" in support of the Robert H. Smith Playground Enhancement Project. The team fitness activities and post-workout yoga will leave you feeling terrific. Click on Extreme Recess Registration to register now!
Monday, 3 December 2012
Globe and Mail article about Natural Play
How kids can reconnect with nature on the playground
DAVE MCGINN
THE GLOBE AND MAIL
Published Friday, Nov. 23 2012, 6:51 PM EST
An earlier generation of kids may have spent all their free time playing in the woods, but in today’s world of helicopter parenting and stranger danger, letting their children do the same is unthinkable for many parents.
Now, park designers and officials as well as school boards are trying to reacquaint kids with nature, not by sending them into the forest, but by creating what are called natural playgrounds.
“Connecting to nature is something that’s becoming more and more important everywhere,” says Adam Bienenstock of Bienenstock Natural Playgrounds, a design and construction company based in Dundas, Ont.
Mr. Bienenstock designed Vancouver’s first natural playground, built at Grandview Elementary School in 2011, as well as what promises to be Edmonton’s first, at Donnan Park. The company also has projects under way in Ottawa, Toronto, Hamilton and Fort McMurray, Alta.
This week, the Toronto District School Board rejected a plan to sell off playground land to help pay for capital projects, reaffirming the importance of wide-open spaces to children’s development.
The movement to swap swings, slides and monkey bars for boulders, grassy hills and trees is gaining ground across Canada, the United States and other countries. Advocates say natural playgrounds prompt much more imaginative free play, foster social interaction and cut down on bullying, and encourage the sort of risk-taking some experts say overcautious parenting has been unintentionally blocking.
Their emergence can be traced back to the 2005 book Last Child in the Woods, by journalist Richard Louv. He coined the phrase “nature deficit disorder,” cautioning that cutting children off from nature was linked to rising rates of obesity, depression and attention deficit disorder.
With more people than ever now living in urban environments, there is a greater recognition of the importance of connecting kids with nature through play. In the United States, natural playgrounds have been created in Chicago, Boston, Portland, Seattle, Phoenix and New York in recent years.
The concept has reached such a critical mass that the Natural Wildlife Federation and the Natural Learning Initiative at North Carolina State University have partnered to create the Natural Play & Learning Area Guidelines Project, to outline a road map for the design and management of natural play environments.
Natural playgrounds typically include five elements, according to Mr. Bienenstock: rolling topography, boulders, logs, pathways and large trees and shrubs. The specifics are usually reflective of local surroundings: “This is the ‘100-mile diet’ of playgrounds.”
Traditional playgrounds decide for kids in advance how they will play: Swings are for swinging; slides are for sliding. But in a natural playground, it is not immediately clear how their elements should be incorporated, so it is up to kids to use their imaginations.
“That’s the whole theory behind it,” says Scott Belair, the lead instructor for the Canadian Playground Safety Institute.
Research has also shown that natural playgrounds alter the way children in them relate to one another.
“In a commercial playground, usually what ends up happening is that the most athletically gifted child ends up choosing the game and running the playground,” Mr. Belair says. “With a naturalized playground, kids tend to play more co-operatively. … There’s a wider variety of play elements involved than just who can climb the fastest or the highest.”
Link to the full article (It's a great read!)
Tuesday, 6 November 2012
Survey Results
The survey results are in!! We are excited to have received almost 150 families respond to the survey about the Playground Enhancement Project. And of those respondents, 78.5% of families believe that the PAG should move forward with this project.
Please click on the link below to browse through the results.
Survey Monkey Results
Where do we go from here? First we need to get PAG approval to begin fundraising and collecting donations on behalf of the project. Next we need to form a committee to get things rolling. Finally, we need to start TALKING about the project and supporting the positive responses we received from families in our community about this project.
Queenston School Gym Expansion is a great example of what our community can do when it works together. Thanks to $295,000 of fundraised money, our community was able to fund an expansion of 800 square feet so that our children, youth and seniors would have an indoor facility for structured activities.
We want to do the same, only our project is all about outdoor, unstructured play and our square footage is 75,000!!! So get in touch with us and join a committee that is going to change how our community plays outside!
rhsplayground@gmail.com
Please click on the link below to browse through the results.
Survey Monkey Results
Where do we go from here? First we need to get PAG approval to begin fundraising and collecting donations on behalf of the project. Next we need to form a committee to get things rolling. Finally, we need to start TALKING about the project and supporting the positive responses we received from families in our community about this project.
Queenston School Gym Expansion is a great example of what our community can do when it works together. Thanks to $295,000 of fundraised money, our community was able to fund an expansion of 800 square feet so that our children, youth and seniors would have an indoor facility for structured activities.
We want to do the same, only our project is all about outdoor, unstructured play and our square footage is 75,000!!! So get in touch with us and join a committee that is going to change how our community plays outside!
rhsplayground@gmail.com
Thursday, 27 September 2012
Playground phasing plan and cost estimate
Below are two images. The first shows the proposed phases for the playground. Combined with the Master plan from an earlier post on the site, you can get a clear idea of what items are included in each phase.
Below is the cost estimate for each phase of the project. The landscape architect firm is responsible for tendering all works to qualified suppliers and evaluating the submissions.
Tuesday, 10 April 2012
Landscape Master Plan for the Playground |
Project Focus
We want to state right from the beginning
that this project isn’t just about making our playground look nicer or “greening”
the community. It isn’t only about making River Heights a better place to live. While
these goals will be achieved through the project, this is also what we want: We
want to offer kids more – more than simply a rectangular field, an oval track,
a rectangular hard top, and an old playground structure. We want them to feel
good about themselves, build self-esteem and improve their physical and mental
well-being. We want them to be able to explore, jump, spin, run, catch, roll,
slide, toboggan, sit, talk, act, imagine, hide, seek, balance, and sweat.
Here are some ideas about what kids
currently do and what we expect to see once Phase 1 of the playground is done:
Current recess activity
|
2014-2015 recess activity
|
One child pulling another on a toboggan
across a flat field until he or she gets tired (or bored because its not fast
enough).
|
Three or four children on one
toboggan going down a hill; working out who pulls the toboggan back up.
|
Kids shovelling snow so that they can
build a shelter to play in and protect them from the wind.
|
Kids shovelling snow so that they can
make snow forest among the berms and trees in the aspen forest.
|
Children huddling together by the
doors to protect from the wind; they are laughing and talking and waiting to
go inside.
|
Children sitting on berms or logs or
boulders, unconcerned about the time or temperature, and just enjoying the
fresh air.
|
Teacher playing soccer after school
with the children.
|
Teachers outside using the
amphitheatre as an outdoor classroom; teacher and students investigating the
soil or insects that live in the ditch; students checking the weather
station.
|
One play structure where classrooms
must follow a schedule as to when they are permitted to use the structure.
|
Multiple play structure areas allowing
all children to have a structure on which to play, whenever they want to
play.
|
Children playing soccer and football
on the field, leaving anyone not playing soccer with little green space on
which to play.
|
Children setting their own challenge
games, using the rope obstacle course, spinners, hill, boulders, and log
bridges.
|
While River Heights residents may have easy
access to the new Nature’s Playground at Assiniboine Park, but most of the
playground is officially closed during the winter months. These are the months
when children need to be outside, need to be more active and need interesting
activities to keep them warm and engaged. The rest of our community offers
little in terms of a connection to nature. We want people to think: “let’s walk
over to the playground” so that we can move away from the idea of “let’s get in the car and drive”. We drive to
work, drive to the grocery store, drive to the gym and drive to the playground.
We need to find ways to reduce the amount we all drive our cars, so our focus
on building a playground in our own backyard is to help reduce the amount of
driving that families do to get to awesome playgrounds or places to play. It
should be as easy as shoes on, close the door and walk/bike/skate to the
school.
Our focus is on all types of play –
physical, natural, and creative, but we are the environment committee, so our
focus is also on the environment. Our process in planning the project to date
has been to ensure that any design has little negative impact on the environment,
but that it can play a role in helping the environment. The plan includes rain
gardens, bio swales, natural prairie grass turf, and native plantings,
including trees. Currently we have very little shade, and shade is important as
it helps reduce the impact of the drying of the sun on grasses and plantings.
Shade is also critical for the children, as it protects them from the direct
sun and the strong winter winds.
Previously, small projects were undertaken
at the school to beautify the grounds or deal with soggy field issue, all done
with an unclear long-term vision. We realized that to transform our playground,
we needed a professional plan – a Master plan. Following a sound selection and planning
process, we selected the local landscape architect firm Scatliff +Miller +
Murray Inc. (SMM). We chose SMM based on their expertise in creating innovative
playgrounds such as Assiniboine Park Children’s Garden and École St. Avila. We
recently shared the Master plan at a Robert H Smith Open House where students,
teachers, and families came to see the vision for the school grounds and to
make suggestions. As the Master plan is a large project in itself, we have
divided it into 4 phases. We are now at the point where we are ready to start
Phase 1.
Our goal is to have our schoolyard be an
exciting, fun environment for children of all ages that they can be proud of
and take ownership of. We know that active, creative children are happier and
more likely to succeed in school. We want to provide them with more
opportunities to develop positive relationships with peers as well as interact
with a natural environment.
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