(no title)
Clanan
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7 years ago
Playborhood, by Mike Lanza, describes a related endeavor to transform one's yard into an inviting area for neighborhood kids. My wife and I have been discussing this quite a lot lately. How do we bring back neighborhood play so kids can get outside, meet each other, and just be kids?
Someone1234|7 years ago
Even using age appropriate play equipment and a soft-fall surface, you'd likely still wind up getting sued if a kid broke an arm or worse.
Some quick Googling suggests you'd need to have the playground owned by an LLC and get it "commercial business insurance" specifically commercial playground insurance.
The problem with that is that you likely aren't zoned for commercial, so running a "commercial" (even free) playground from a residential property is unlawful.
And you can put up an "at your own risk" sign but given attractive nuisance doctrine it likely wouldn't protect you from full liability.
Then on top of that, if the playground was too popular, or some of the kids caused issues near by neighbours likely would complain.
I know I sound like a complete grinch. I think it is a fantastic idea. Just the more I consider it, the more issues and expenses crop up.
Negitivefrags|7 years ago
xkcd-sucks|7 years ago
closeparen|7 years ago
0x4f3759df|7 years ago
losteric|7 years ago
"Dream" is just doublespeak here... it's post-WW2 lifestyle advertising. They were convincing people to buy cheap remote land at a steep markup by putting a house on top.
bluGill|7 years ago
limeblack|7 years ago
[1] http://www.irvineparkrailroad.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05...
sevensor|7 years ago
gowld|7 years ago