BronsonShore
Active Member
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2014
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Jesus Christ, does no one on this board have kids? There are slides just like that in parks in all over the city. Stop making up a litigation boogyman.
to answer your question: yes. to reply to the bolded portion of the quote above -- please direct me to a city-owned park with a slide of that length and at that steep of a grade that is open/functional, other than this new installation.Jesus Christ, does no one on this board have kids? There are slides just like that in parks in all over the city. Stop making up a litigation boogyman.
Fallon Field in Rozzie:to answer your question: yes. to reply to the bolded portion of the quote above -- please direct me to a city-owned park with a slide of that length and at that steep of a grade that is open/functional, other than this new installation.
that looks awesome! thanks for the heads-up.Fallon Field in Rozzie:
*For god's sake, man, don't let City Councilor Erin Murphy discover that death trap, lest she nearly disembowel herself, in her clumsiness, like she almost did on the new City Hall Plaza playground slide!*Fallon Field in Rozzie:
Sokolove had one hell of a run, but I think he's been supplanted these days by Jason "Better Phone Stone" Stone Injury Lawyers (whose commercials run about 50x per hour during local broadcasts of the Celtics games)....Somewhere, James Sokolove--is he still metro Boston's reigning amublance chaser, er, personal-injury attorney?--is licking his chops.)
It clearly says it's for children. I'm waiting for an opportunity to go down, but it's probably not designed for adult sized people*For god's sake, man, don't let City Councilor Erin Murphy discover that death trap, lest she nearly disembowel herself, in her clumsiness, like she almost did on the new City Hall Plaza playground slide!*
(spoken a la Shatner in Star Trek)
(In all seriousness, quoting directly from her recollection of her *ordeal*: "I got whipped around in the tunnel and came out backwards and upside down."
Somewhere, James Sokolove--is he still metro Boston's reigning amublance chaser, er, personal-injury attorney?--is licking his chops.)
It is completely awesome. My kids were beyond the playground phase when they re-did Fallon Field, but we all enjoyed checking that slide out when it opened. Super fast and fun, and continues to be very well utilized.that looks awesome! thanks for the heads-up.
Ah finally, a win for the short child sized folks like me over the tall peopleIt clearly says it's for children. I'm waiting for an opportunity to go down, but it's probably not designed for adult sized people
Jesus Christ. Do you actually know anything about liability laws, or are you just basing this on vibes?I'm guessing the immediate ground where the slide lets out is rubberized. But I doubt this slide will continue the way it is. Someone will get hurt and the lawyers will swarm.
The Esplanade playground would like a word. I've seen more kids than I can count (including my own) fall off that climbing structure. I've also seen the ropes on one of the swings entangle a child's arm and break it with an audible snap. If we can get through all that without lawsuits closing the playground (though they did use a different rope arrangement for the aforementioned swing), the kids of Boston and this new playground should survive. Having taken a kid almost all the way to teendom in the city and meeting other parents doing the same, we're all just glad there are playgrounds that actually entertain kids older than toddlers. Also, when you're dealing with the T, traffic, the colorful denizens of the city, and the general flow of city life, a "fast slide" is wayyyyyy down the list of things that are going to get you riled up as a parent.Someone will get hurt and the lawyers will swarm
It gets even better. Sasaki put up some temporary explanatory signs talking about what's in the playground and where their design ideas came from with the heading "Kinder Brutalism."“Kiddie Hall Playground” is such an awesome name!
What? If by fringe group you can the majority of the City of Boston that has marked city hall as one of the most hated buildings in the city, sure. I'd say the fringe group are the people that like City Hall and Brutalism in general.Isn't this redesign of the plaza--a softening up of or feeling better with--a result of a fringe group that wanted to raze city hall because they single mindedly decided that Brutalism was an unfit architectural style for today's civic buildings? And with some of today's political gatherings--or reaching back to when busing was a big fight in this town--children are the last group of humans that you would want nearby. Just, be careful.