Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Play Space OPENING and Final Work Day!

Saturday September 28th will be our final Play Space Work Day before our Opening Celebration on Sunday September 29th.  Join Us!



Work Day
Saturday, September 28th, 10am - 1pm
At The Catskill Community Center
**We will be putting finishing touches on the Play Space including sanding, painting, beautifying and final safety checks. This is also an opportunity for some preview PLAYING! Open to anyone. You don't have to be a workshop participant to attend.

Opening Celebration
Sunday, September 29th, 3-5pm 
At The Catskill Community Center
**Come Experience Our New Indoor Play Space and Play, Play Play!
Workshop participants' drawings and models will be on display and everyone will leave with a zine filled with our Play Space Designs. We'll have some snacks too. (and maybe, maybe live music...)


Thursday, August 29, 2013

Imagination comes to life at Catskill Community Center- Daily Mail article by Kyle Adams

http://www.registerstar.com/the_daily_mail/news/article_7efdadfc-d6dc-11e2-85d5-001a4bcf887a.html

CATSKILL — A floor-to-ceiling wooden fort, decked out with ladders, slides, swings and windows, has risen in the Catskill Community Center over the past two days. The one-of-a-kind play space is the result of the six-week Design, Build, Play program that took kids through the various stages of design to bring a dream to life.
Concept drawings now cover a wall near the play space, detailing features like a “puppets and hang-out” space, a “tree of play,” the “secret underground” accessed, of course, by a secret tunnel, and a slide that ends at “softness.”
Along the opposite wall sits a table full of small-scale models made with string, PVC pipe, cardboard, sticks, playdough, blocks and other materials, including the ambitious “Utopian Catskill” block city with a central pyramid, and a hammock-like swing prototype.
“I’m hoping they’ve gotten some sense of the design process,” said Laura Anderson, director of after school activities at the Community Center. “From drawing to modeling to hands-on building.”
After six weeks of design, guided by supervisors and volunteers, the children picked up simple hand tools and — under careful supervision — got to work building their dream.
“I was super excited that in the last couple of weeks, they actually worked with hand tools,” said Anderson. “They used hand drills and screwdrivers. Some of the kids who werent even interested at first, by the end of the day, were like ‘Hey, I did it!’ There was this pride that came from it.”
Along with Anderson, the project was supervised by builder and artist Matt Bua, who built the Catamount People’s Museum on West Bridge Street. Anderson said the two-level play space — built mostly from off-cuts from a local saw mill, donated wood and other recycled materials — will be “absolutely safe.” When finished, it will be inspected and approved by the Community Center Board of Directors.
Anderson said about 18 children participated over the course of the program, from ages six to 12, with about ten adult volunteers. Most of that crowd showed up for the first community build day on Saturday, June 15. Sunday was more sparsely attended due to Father’s Day. Anderson anticipates at least one more public day, possibly focused on painting murals on the walls behind the play fort.
When the structure began to rise, Anderson said the kids became even more inspired, generating more and more ideas for it.
“They’re so excited,” she said. “After school they came up here and they were just speechless.”
In the future, she’d like the play space to have public hours, especially in winter, so the community can take advantage of it. She’s also considering establishing a “Play Cafe,” a few hours on a weekend morning when parents can enjoy brunch, tea or coffee while the children play.
When Anderson asked 7-year-old Charlotte LaRocque, a regular participant who was helping to build Sunday afternoon, what she first thought when she saw the play space, her answer was concise: “post office.” An elaborate post office operation, with houses across the street — on the other side of the room — house number nine, number two, that you have to deliver all the letters to correctly.
The post office, of course, is downstairs. The upstairs is a jungle, as you can tell, Charlotte explained, by the green backdrop and all the vines — the vines aren’t up yet, though. Those ropes on the ground, she pointed out, will be the vines, so for now you just have to imagine it.
***

To reach reporter Kyle Adams, call 518-943-2100, ext. 3323, or e-mail kadams@thedailymail.net

Seven-year-old Charlotte LaRocque tests out the new play space at the Catskill Community Center Sunday afternoon. Phote by Kyle Adams

Friday, August 2, 2013

the Overview

A Collaborative Project 
Bringing Children and Adults Together
 To Design And Build
An Indoor Play Space At The
Catskill Community Center
 
 Play Space Design/Build Workshops

Fridays 4:00-5:30, May 3- June 7
At The Catskill Community Center, 344 Main St.
For Children Ages 6-12
(Children under 6 may attend with an adult)
Teen and Adult Collaborators Are Also Encouraged to Participate.

To sign up contact Laura Anderson 570-560-0463  lalarky@gmail.com

Workshop Description: Over the course of 6 weeks we will create a series of designs for our Play Space both on paper and in 3D and begin the building process. We’ll start by exploring play spaces around the world through slides and books. Then we’ll start to map out our own play space on paper and with models using cardboard, wood and clay. Near the end of the 6 weeks we’ll learn how to use some basic hand tools and begin building elements of the play space. By the end of the 6 weeks we’ll have a “zine” of participants drawings to share and a set of collaborative designs for use during the “Community Build Weekend”.

Community Build Weekend

Open to All, Young and Old
Saturday and Sunday June 15th and 16th
10am-3pm Each Day Including a Potluck Lunch at Noon
At The Catskill Community Center
Join us for the whole day, part of the day or just stop by for lunch and see what we’re up to.

A chance for children and adults to work side by side to bring our play space to life using the children’s designs intermingled with spontaneous inspiration. Bring tools, materials and a playful spirit. And if you can, bring something tasty to share for lunch.

Check back for updates.


This event is made possible with public funds from the decentralization program of the NYS council on the Arts, administered in Greene County by the Greene County Council on the Arts through the Community Arts Grant Fund

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Community Build Weekend Extravaganza


Help Bring Our Play Space to Life!

Saturday and Sunday June 15th and 16th
10am - 3pm with a Potluck Lunch at Noon
At The Catskill Community Center, 344 Main St.

Open To All, Young and Old
Come by for the whole day, part of the day or just stop by for lunch and see what we're up to.

No experience necessary (though building know-how is a plus)

Mostly we want to see you, but if you have any of the following tools or materials feel free to bring them too. Oh, and something tasty to share for lunch...

Materials Wish List:
Fabric for Tents
Grommets
Rope
Sheet Metal to hang on the wall as a Magnet Board
Heavy Duty Magnets
Bouncy Things (rubber hosing, bungie cords)
Paint
Plywood (can be scraps)
Heavy Cardboard Tubes
Hinges
Hooks
Foam floor mats
Beautiful Sticks to add to the "Tree"
Costumes for the Costume Closet!!

Tools:
Screw Guns
Saws
Rasps
Chisels
Sand Paper

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Play Space Design Workshops Wrap Up

Last Friday we wrapped up our 6 weeks of Friday Play Space Design Workshops.  18 children and nearly as many adults worked together on drawings, models and a couple of "prototypes" that we've coalesced into a mutable master plan for next weekends Play Space Build Extravaganza!



 We hope you can join us!

Check out the design fun below (We don't have any pictures of everyone's amazing drawings. We're working on a zine to distribute at an end of Summer Opening and the drawings will all be on display for next weekends Build) :


We spent the first few weeks focused on making drawings and models of our dream play spaces. Here's our crew hard at work.



Below is Daniela Carlin's (age 7) "Rainbow Climber".

 Here is Fawn Potash's climbing web plus zip line in progress.


When Matt Bua described the concept of armature in sculpture making to
Charlotte LaRocque (age 7) she modified her chair model
to include wood and pipe cleaner supports. 


Laura Anderson and Olivia LaRocque (age 9) were both excited about including tents in the play space. This model of their concept was built by Olivia. You can't see it from this angle but there are pipe cleaner bean bag chairs inside the tent.


Kaithe (age 6) built this model of an obstacle course on stilts with the help of his father Scott.

Julia Russell built the model below of a Vet's office. She described it as one incarnation of a room in the play space that could change into lots of different things like a Laboratory or Restaurant or a place to go to be quiet and get ideas.

Echo Roe built this one. It's the entrance to the play space. 
You drop a token in the basket as you go in.


On the last day of the workshop we had a slideshow of Play Grounds from around the World. (We wanted to do this at the beginning but had some technical difficulties with the projector)  Olivia was inspired by photos of a giant knitted climbing sculpture in Japan and decided to try her hand at weaving a net for our play space. She started out trying to use these pieces of cardboard to attach the weaving to...


...but decided that a PVC frame might work better.


 The finished "prototype" was beautiful and functional and enjoyed by many. We discussed how she could make the weaving tighter and she's excited to make another to be hung up like a swing during the Build Weekend.





During the last two weeks of the workshop we got out the hand drills and screw drivers and the kids learned how to use tools safely while putting together a box and a "fox" frame that will be incorporated into the Play Space.


The ever cautious Matt even let these two determined girls use the saw.



Design has been a theme in the CCC's After School Program as well as our Friday workshops. Charlotte LaRocque, who attends both programs, recently drew this picture which she then created a model of using blocks. They represent her vision of a "Utopian Catskill" with elevated streets, parks in between and a Pyramid meeting place in the enter of the village.




Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Daily Mail Article



6 weeks to build children’s dreams

By Kyle Adams Hudson-Catskill Newspapers | Posted: Tuesday, May 7, 2013 1:15 am
CATSKILL — A new program at the Catskill Community Center is aiming to help children “build their dreams” over the next six weeks.
The Design, Build, Play program, which began last Friday, will let children design a play space in the Community Center, starting with drawings, continuing through wood and clay models, and culminating in actual construction in a two-day community build.
Laura Anderson, director of after school activities at the Community Center, who’s organizing the program with sculptor and artist Matt Bua, said the idea was to let the children “design their own play space that would be more than just blocks and toys, but could be an actual structure inside that they could use.”
In six Friday workshops, from 4 to 5:30 p.m., children from ages six to 12 will brainstorm and design the play space of their dreams. They’ll study other landmark play spaces like those in the City Museum in St. Louis and the Playground at the Queens Hall of Science in New York City and learn basic drawing and modeling skills. Volunteers will help guide the process and teach the necessary skills.
“The exciting part is that we’re really going to let the kids come up with the design,” said Anderson. “We’re going to let them take the lead.”
The final build will take place on June 15 and 16, when children — depending on age and maturity level — along with parents and volunteers will take up tools and bring the dream to life. They’ll learn to work with wood, cardboard, rope and paint, as well as simple hand tools like hand drills and screwdrivers.
The resulting “collaborative sculptural masterpiece,” as a press release puts it, will “serve as the raw material for the inventive play of the youngsters in the Catskill Community Center’s array of youth programs and as an inspirational backdrop to community events.”
Anderson said the final product will be a much-needed indoor playground for Catskill’s kids.
“I was noticing that the kids love imaginative play and fantasy play and I was dreaming of giving them more raw material to work with,” said Anderson. “And I’ve talked to a lot of parents who say there’s a real need in this area to have a place other than McDonald’s to go to in the winter for the kids to play.”
Anderson said while she acts as an educator, Bua — who built the giant wooden cat statue on Bridge Street — will be the artist and builder behind the project.
About 10 children are already on board, as well as a handful of volunteers. But Anderson said registration is still open and volunteers are always welcome, even if it’s only for a day or two. Volunteers need no special skills except the willingness to act as “mentors and collaborators” with the children — though Anderson said anyone with particular skill in drawing or design is invited to help teach.
The whole program is made possible by a $2,600 grant from the Greene County Council on the Arts, said Anderson.
While kids will learn some specific skills like design and modeling, Anderson has loftier ambitions, as well.
“Hopefully, they’ll get a sense that their dreams, their designs, they can really create that in the world,” she said.
The process of dreaming something up and then creating it in real life, she hopes, will “help them feel empowered in their lives to build their dreams.”
Anyone interested in participating is encouraged to contact Anderson at 570-560-0463 or lalarky@gmail.com. Visitwww.designbuildplay.blogspot.com for updates..
***
To reach reporter Kyle Adams, call 518-943-2100, ext. 3323, or e-mail kadams@thedailymail.net.