Research Article

Fences of childhood: Challenging the meaning of playground boundaries in design

  • Alkistis Pitsikali , 1 ,
  • Rosie Parnell 2
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  • 1. Department of Architecture and Built Environment, Northumbria University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, NE1 8ST, United Kingdom
  • 2. School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape, Newcastle University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, NE1 8ST, United Kingdom

Received date: 23 Nov 2019

Revised date: 26 Feb 2020

Accepted date: 05 Mar 2020

Published date: 15 Sep 2020

Copyright

2020 2020 Higher Education Press Limited Company. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of KeAi. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

Abstract

Scholars have criticized the capacity of playgrounds to support children’s participation in public life. Fences of childhood, such as walls, fences, and enclosures, dominate children’s “public” spatial experiences in the global north. Challenging well-established critiques of the fenced playground as a space that segregates and controls childhood experiences, this study offers a novel and nuanced perspective, emphasizing the qualities of the playground fence that support play and playful connections, on, through, and around it. Employing an ethnographic methodology, this study includes 167h of observations in three typical urban public playgrounds in Greece and 65 semi-structured interviews with 124 participants. Drawing on recursive thematic qualitative analysis, the fence emerges as a blurred boundary, that is, an element that transgresses assumptions and questions spatial classifications and hierarchies. Rarely the subject of design discourse, these findings are particularly significant in design disciplines globally and offer new understandings on the possibilities afforded by the playground fence. Emergent themes, namely, indeterminacy, climbabilty, playability, and porosity, are proposed as principles to guide fenced playground design as part of a fundamental reconceptualization. This reconceptualization positions the fenced playground as a public space infrastructure, supporting intergenerational interaction and play as well as children’s presence and play in the public realm.

Cite this article

Alkistis Pitsikali , Rosie Parnell . Fences of childhood: Challenging the meaning of playground boundaries in design[J]. Frontiers of Architectural Research, 2020 , 9(3) : 656 -669 . DOI: 10.1016/j.foar.2020.03.001

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