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The Science of Play: How to Build Playgrounds That Enhance Children's Development Hardcover – November 4, 2014
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length228 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUniversity Press of New England
- Publication dateNovember 4, 2014
- Dimensions7 x 1 x 10 inches
- ISBN-101611686105
- ISBN-13978-1611686104
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Editorial Reviews
Review
So what's the alternative to standard-issue playgrounds? Solomon envisions multipurpose, multigenerational urban parks that incorporate spaces where kids can take charge of their own play. Instead of a fixed bridge in a plastic fort, they would have to use their imagination to decide which objects could be converted to play equipment. Such a challenging play space also would include nooks where kids could temporarily escape the nervous gaze of their caregivers. There would be no fences, plenty of trees and bushes, and good seating."-- "Philadelphia Inquirer"
The conclusion of the author's research is that playgrounds should be multigenerational and mesh with the surrounding environment. Peppered with color and black-and-white illustrations, this well-written, well-researched book is a much-needed inspiration for and to children. . . . Recommended."-- "Choice"
Through the Science of Play: How to Build Playgrounds that Enhance Children's Development, Susan G. Solomon strongly advocates for the revamping of playgrounds in the United States. . . . She makes the case for replicating the playgrounds of Europe and Japan that provide spaces for taking risks, solving problems, experiencing natural consequences, and engaging in multiple-generational social interactions."--Paige Johnson, editor of Play-Scapes.com "American Journal of Play"
"So what's the alternative to standard-issue playgrounds? Solomon envisions multipurpose, multigenerational urban parks that incorporate spaces where kids can take charge of their own play. Instead of a fixed bridge in a plastic fort, they would have to use their imagination to decide which objects could be converted to play equipment. Such a challenging play space also would include nooks where kids could temporarily escape the nervous gaze of their caregivers. There would be no fences, plenty of trees and bushes, and good seating." --Philadelphia Inquirer
"The conclusion of the author's research is that playgrounds should be multigenerational and mesh with the surrounding environment. Peppered with color and black-and-white illustrations, this well-written, well-researched book is a much-needed inspiration for and to children. . . . Recommended." --Choice
"Through the Science of Play: How to Build Playgrounds that Enhance Children's Development, Susan G. Solomon strongly advocates for the revamping of playgrounds in the United States. . . . She makes the case for replicating the playgrounds of Europe and Japan that provide spaces for taking risks, solving problems, experiencing natural consequences, and engaging in multiple-generational social interactions." --American Journal of Play
"The conclusion of the author s research is that playgrounds should be multigenerational and mesh with the surrounding environment. Peppered with color and black-and-white illustrations, this well-written, well-researched book is a much-needed inspiration for and to children. . . . Recommended. Choice"
Susan Solomon provides the missing link of playground design: serious research about how the built form of the playground affects children, parents, and even whole communities. In so doing, she exposes both the failure of the American playground and its enormous potential.Great places for play are great places for life: read this book to learn how, and why, to make them. Paige Johnson, editor of Play-Scapes.com"
American Journal of Play"
"It's nice to read a book that is emphasizing how children's needs . . . can influence design so directly!"--Yashar Hanstad, TYIN tegnestue Architects,
Choice"
Philadelphia Inquirer"
"This is a book for anyone--landscape architect, park administrator, or parent--seeking better outdoor play spaces. Solomon's research shows the critical place of risk taking for children and her visually compelling, sometimes truly astonishing examples from around the globe reveal new realms of possibility. Solomon guides us to reconsider the types of play we aim to foster without romanticizing either children or play, and with a practical approach to encouraging more adventurous thinking about playground design."--Amy F. Ogata, author of Designing the Creative Child: Playthings and Places in Midcentury America
"We should stop settling. That's what this necessary book tells us: our playgrounds don't have to be the homogenous, soulless places that they are. Instead, they can be places of great possibility--more stimulating, more inventive, more inclusive, more alive. (And less expensive, too.) With stunning case studies from across the world, Susan Solomon shows us how far behind we are--and gives us a blueprint for how to catch up. We have no more excuses."--Nicholas Day, author of Baby Meets World: Suck, Smile, Touch, Toddle: A Journey Through Infancy
Review
“This is a book for anyone—landscape architect, park administrator, or parent—seeking better outdoor play spaces. Solomon’s research shows the critical place of risk taking for children and her visually compelling, sometimes truly astonishing examples from around the globe reveal new realms of possibility. Solomon guides us to reconsider the types of play we aim to foster without romanticizing either children or play, and with a practical approach to encouraging more adventurous thinking about playground design.” (Amy F. Ogata, author of Designing the Creative Child: Playthings and Places in Midcentury America)
“It’s nice to read a book that is emphasizing how children’s needs . . . can influence design so directly!” (Yashar Hanstad, TYIN tegnestue Architects)
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : University Press of New England
- Publication date : November 4, 2014
- Edition : 1st
- Language : English
- Print length : 228 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1611686105
- ISBN-13 : 978-1611686104
- Item Weight : 1.56 pounds
- Dimensions : 7 x 1 x 10 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,321,753 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,615 in Family Activity
- #1,691 in Medical Child Psychology
- #2,051 in Popular Child Psychology
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Susan G. Solomon was born in Perth Amboy, New Jersey. She received a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1997. Trained as an art historian with a concentration on twentieth-century architecture, Solomon has extensive experience as curator, writer,and speaker. She heads her own research firm, Curatorial Resources & Research in Princeton, New Jersey.
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2015Susan Solomon's new book, The Science of Play, is an important and remarkable book that takes a fresh approach to the subject of playgrounds. This wonderful overview explores the importance of play and playgrounds for children, with special focus on play solutions that encourage risk taking, succeeding and failing, planning ahead, experiencing nature, and making friends. It is also a remarkable book because it asks us to aggressively rethink playgrounds and the need for play, despite our over-litigious society's drive to eliminate risk from life. In doing this, she stresses that parents need to recognize that some level of risk is desirable and even necessary to children's development. She is also asking us, as parents, public officials, design professionals, and those responsible for children's lives, to take risks ourselves: In short, to be more inspired and creative ourselves in the interest of childhood betterment.
Many, if not most of our playgrounds and play equipment, Solomon notes, have become boring: uniform, unimaginative, banal. They do not encourage play; they are not stimulating places where kids want to be; nor do they enliven their communities.
Citing behavioral science studies, Solomon stresses the developmental importance of energetic and inspired play. The book is a call to action for re-introducing such stimulating play. She includes more than 50 best practice state-of-the-art yet affordable examples from around the world, with special focus on foreign solutions in England, Europe and Japan that "avoid the rigidity and predictability of traditional playground equipment" to create inspiring, stimulating environments for children. These examples are all tastefully selected, with special emphasis on sustainability, and range from such diverse projects as the intimate Norwegian fire pit and Cave by Haugen/Zohar Arkitekter to the large knitted fabric climbing sculpture inJapan by the artist Toshiko Horiuchi MacAdam. She also includes U.S. examples by architects such as the Rockwell Group; landscape architects such as Michael Van Valkenburgh, and Steven Koch; as well as by artists, that manage to enrich play while still meeting safety guidelines. She positions these in a historical context which includes the pioneering playgrounds of Aldo van Eyck, Kahn and Noguchi. She writes also how playgrounds can become multi-use vibrant community hubs.
As a practicing design professional, I admit guilt to selecting dumbed-down yet "safe" playground equipment, as a safeguard against potential litigation. And yet one of my favorite playground experiences was at a rustic in Finland, where my young son could do things that would never have been possible at a public park in the US. There he was able to use a long rope swing to land on an intertube in the middle of a lake. In simulated rapids, while struggling to retain my grip on him while I watched kids shoot past us in the swift water to wind up who knows where, it occurred to me that not only did these Finns seem hardier, heartier, and less litigious than we Americans, but it also seemed their kids were having far more fun.
The Science of Play focuses on the little explored yet tremendously important and influential environments of children's playgrounds, and through many specific examples shows how they can be repositioned from the stultifying settings they too often are to the inspiring, stimulating and educational settings they need to be.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 6, 2015This is such an incredible book. I am so glad that she wrote this. These books are critical to helping the United States address a national play reform.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2015We are building an adventure playground and are using this book as research. My husband and I have both learned a lot about the theories behind play.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2015Susan Solomon has challenged conventional thinking in the U.S. about the use and design of urban playground space. She provides many intriguing examples that show the vibrant alternatives that exist, mostly in Europe and Japan. These play spaces make a compelling case for how circumscribed the typical American playground has become. In our risk-adverse culture, the fenced-in, standardized post-and-deck structure provides little in the way of exploration, cautious risk-taking and cooperative learning. The result is a missed opportunity for children to learn and develop. She shows that a professionally designed space does not have to be prohibitively expensive and that it can result in spaces that entice intergenerational use. The skillfully taken and carefully chosen photographs enhance the clearly written prose. Her material should appeal to parents, teachers, neighborhood activists and design professionals.







