By Nick Halter
Shoreview Commons. Photo courtesy of Lanscape Structures Inc.
When Landscape Structures creates a new piece of playground equipment, the staff invite a group of kids to the company's sprawling Delano headquarters to try it out.
Why it matters: Landscape Structures' (LSI) local staff of around 500 — plus a select group of Twin Cities test kids — have shaped the way children play, from Shoreview to Brooklyn, N.Y., to Singapore.
By the numbers: LSI builds 1,500 to 2,000 playgrounds a year for cities, schools, and private companies across the country and internationally. They can range from tens of thousands of dollars for small pocket parks to millions for destination playgrounds.
Driving the news: Nick here. I recently toured the company's headquarters and factory, where Roschi met me in the lobby after gliding down a slide from his second-floor desk.
The intrigue: I asked Roschi to see the building where the pizza tests happen. That was a hard no. He said the industry is rife with copycats who steal LSI designs.
What's ahead: The next big local project LSI is working on is in Chaska, where city officials are planning a destination playground.
As most parents know, playgrounds have changed significantly in the past two decades, and they continue to morph.
I asked Roschi about some of the latest trends.
Flooring: Playground users beg cities to splurge on rubber flooring. Rubber is more accessible for people in wheelchairs and it's better for older adults chasing around little kids. But there are a couple of drawbacks.
Height: In Europe, which Roschi noted is less litigious, tall towers have been much more popular on playgrounds. But LSI and other companies have found ways to make towers safer by enclosing them and making sure they're designed so that kids never drop too far in the middle. The reality is that kids like stuff that seems dangerous.
Colors: Roschi said two things draw a kid to a playground: the shape of the equipment and the color. A lot of the new ones have earthier and natural colors, while a lot of the older ones have brighter colors.
Swings: They take up a lot of space, and for cities with limited land, they are getting nixed more often from plans. However, Roschi added that studies show that swings keep kids at playgrounds longer.
Editor's note: This story has been corrected to show the new playground in Brooklyn is on the East River, not the Hudson River.