Landscape & Urban Design Issue 15 2015 | Page 76

Tyrannosaurus Recs Horsham’s New Recreation Facilities Bring Dinosaurs Back to Life eibe Play has been working with tourist attractions, district councils and schools for the last two decades. Effecting inventive children’s playspaces featuring imaginative designs and unique, long-lasting products is the reason we exist. Everything we do – it’s just child’s play! Building on the successes of other high profile projects at Kew Gardens, Paulton’s Park and LEGOLAND, eibe was thrilled to win a £140,000 contract to install a very special park in West Sussex this summer. 'Dinosaur Island' is a brand new adventure play area for Horsham Country Park. The previously run-down recreation space now features an array of fantastic play equipment and special effects such as an active volcano, red hot lava flows, a tar quagmire, a dinosaur swamp and a prehistoric jungle. It is a delightful themed playspace that commemorates a past age. It is sure to keep children entertained for many years in the future. Paul Redden, eibe’s managing director, believes the choice of equipment by Horsham District Council was critical in terms of appealing to a diversification of ages: “Toddlers through to teenagers can use the park. For the older kids, there’s the zip wire across lizard infested ditches and a really exciting aerial walkway along sheer slopes to look out over the Country Park lake. The small ones will love crossing the dinosaur bones and deadly swampland. Even the parents will enjoy swinging through the j ungle and climbing the volcano!” The important specification of products stemmed from consultations with local schools. The key stakeholders in the Eastern Shires Procurement Organisation (ESPO) tender then deliberated, and taking on board the feedback from the children, opted for eibe’s innovative proposal. It was our uniqueness of products that stole the show, mixed with our empathy in mirroring the council’s own mission to regenerate the area and theme it in a natural way, thus creating a destination park that would ultimately entertain and educate. The initial concept was a 3D Masterpiece created by design director David Hibberd and his team. 76 Landscape & Urban Design Issue 15 So began the detailed design stage. Many tweaks and adjustments were made to the first draft. “Working in harmony with Deborah Mallard, the council’s landscape architect, we had to take into account the contours and landscaping of the park,” says Hibberd, “Being mindful of the standards of foundations needed for our high duty equipment was a design imperative. Several visits were necessary to plot the slopes, paths and natural swales. Back in the studio, we adapted our designs accordingly. An accompanying video had a huge impact with the client.” 01483-813834 [email protected] www.eibe.co.uk