Thursday, May 31, 2018

Parks in Antwerp

What I adore most about Antwerp is the city's recognition that a community is only as strong and sustainable as the quality of the human networks that underpin it.

With that in mind, the parks in Antwerp are truly designed to create and foster those networks from each Antwerpian's earliest age. There are, within the city and its suburbs, two the three well-designed and maintained parks within walking distance. (Seriously, someone posted a Tweet about a broken net at one park and it was repaired by the next day.)

The park games are gorgeous and usually made with environmentally-friendly materials, and the goal of each park, one of the urban planners educated at the University of Antwerp informed me, is to bring together the sometimes disparate communities found in each city quarter. If we play together from an early age, sharing the slides and swings, we tend to do a better job working and living together as adults.

To further support that goal, the city hosts, particularly during school vacations, a variety of free activities overseen by expert animators for kids within the parks. Below is a sample from one park, aptly named Harmony Park, for the summer of 2018.


For those too lazy to figure it out:

  • uur is hour (so it denotes the hour the activity begins and ends.) 
  • Maandag is Monday.
  • Dinsdag is Tuesday.
  • Woensdag is Wednesday.
  • Donderdag is Thursday.
  • Vrijdag is Friday.
  • Zondag is Sunday. 
Omnisport included a lot of random sports equipment for kids, from coloured cones and a parachute to baseball bats and (soft) baseballs and, at one point, an inflatable bouncy castle. Kleutersport is even more (if possible) random sports equipment for the pre-school age (again with the bouncy castle.)  Judo is judo, Kung Fu is Kung Fu, Zumba is Zumba, Yoga yog, etc.

For each activity, local animators help all those that show up participate in the available games. Because this is Belgium, indeed, Europe, the animators speak an overlapping assortment of languages. 





Quick disclaimer: This is Europe, so no one has to sign a disclaimer, and this is Belgium, so there is no request for a medical certificate that states you are okay to participate. You participate at your own risk (or at the risk of your kids) and you can't sue anybody if things go south. This is to strengthen the community not inject fresh life in your bank account at the community's expense...

Some random park pictures:











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