In a part of Barcelona best known as a concrete transport hub, just a stone’s throw from the bustling Sants railway station, a square has been transformed into an idyllic play area.
Sitting on a sea of bright ethnic cushions and rugs, under canopies shading them from the sun, children tinker with nature-inspired toys, including bits of wood in all shapes and sizes, as their parents look on.
The pop-up play area is part of an “Urban Forest” initiative organized by Tata Inti, a local nonprofit founded in 2014 that provides education to children under six.
The government-funded organization aims to “democratize the care of young children, make it visible, and at the same time recover public space as a meeting place,” Tata Inti cofounder Merce Aranda said.
The Urban Forest project, which is to hold sessions in eight areas of Barcelona over the next few months, offers free play to lower-income families, Aranda said.
It comes at a time when city authorities are pushing forward with a 20.7 million euro (US$23.9 million) initiative, started in 2015, to make Barcelona a more child-friendly city.
Under the plan, 89 new play spaces will be built and 150 existing ones renovated by the end of next year, to make them more accessible and inclusive for children of different ages, as well as those with disabilities.
Underpinning the ambitious scheme is a desire to develop areas outside of the traditional playground model, providing more spontaneous opportunities for play and physical activity.
Globally, fast-growing cities are under pressure to protect children from urban pressures, including crime, traffic, pollution, cramped living conditions and social isolation.
Of the 4 billion people living in the world’s urban areas, nearly a third are children, according to the UN Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF).
By 2050, 70 percent of the world’s children will live in urban areas, it estimates.
Healthy development of children is crucial to the wellbeing of any society and the costs of failing are huge, as children’s early experiences shape their future achievements, according to UNICEF, which runs the global Child Friendly Cities Initiative.
Weaker social cohesion and higher crime rates in dense urban areas increase psychotic symptoms in children, including hearing or seeing things that others do not, a 2016 study published by Duke University in North Carolina found.
Urban planners have begun looking for ways to make cities better for children in an everyday sense by enabling them to get around independently and increasing the amount of time they spend outdoors and in contact with nature.
Independent mobility — when a child can move around a city without being accompanied by an adult — depends on road crossings, perceptions of safety, and the proximity and availability of things to do, global engineering firm Arup said in a report earlier this year on design for urban childhoods.
Cities that can offer children a network of routes and activities that they enjoy using and are good for them means thinking beyond fenced-off playgrounds, said Tim Gill, a UK-based researcher and author who has advised London’s mayor on child-friendly city planning in the past.
Children will play in many different types of spaces, he said.
“So let’s think more creatively about how we can design public spaces where play is a function ... but may not be the only function,” he said.
Cities designed with children in mind would have less traffic and more suitable infrastructure, such as wider pavements, multifunctional play spaces and new models like Barcelona’s “superblock” system, which restricts traffic flow in selected neighborhoods, Arup said.
In Singapore, a new child-friendly bus stop opened last year, featuring a swing, artwork, children’s books, a rooftop garden, lots of seating, and access to e-books, digital maps and other online information.
If the project, devised by the government with DP Architects, is a success, the authorities plan to expand it from the Jurong region to other parts of Singapore.
Some cities have also begun incorporating wild spaces or freestyle playgrounds, where children can play in nature rather than a manmade setting, take risks and even have accidents.
Critics say playground design since the 1970s has become too focused on health and safety, leading to unimaginative facilities that stifle children’s creativity by preventing them from trying new things and making discoveries for themselves.
New initiatives like forest schools and wild spaces aim to counter that.
In Rotterdam’s Nature Playground in the Netherlands, children are allowed to camp and build fires and dens, as if they were in the countryside.
Unstructured outdoor play can improve children’s problem-solving skills, focus and self-discipline, and boost their ability to get along with others, leading to healthier and happier lives, experts say.
However, a number of studies show children in richer countries are spending less time outdoors.
British children play outside half as much as their parents did, according to a 2016 survey from Britain’s National Trust.
The developing world is starting to experience the same trend, Gill said.
“As you are seeing a growing middle-class in poorer countries, you are also seeing children’s lives becoming more constrained, and more fear about children’s freedoms,” he said.
That is partly because wealthier families tend to live in gated communities, he added.
Giving children simple liberties, rather than rearing them “in captivity,” is good for them, but also for society more broadly because it points to the general healthiness of a neighbourhood, Gill said.
“That neighborhood is also going to work pretty well for older people, for people with disabilities, for a wider section of the population,” he said.
In Britain, the “Playing Out” movement to close streets to traffic for a couple of hours on a set day so that children can play there freely has gathered steam in the past few years, expanding from the city of Bristol across the country.
Enabling children from different social classes and ethnic backgrounds to spend regular time together also reduces community tensions, Gill said.
“Those sorts of childhood experiences help to make cities better, more convivial, and places that are more at ease with themselves,” he added.
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