The approach of using the dilapidated adventure playground at Nordgraben in Miesbach for inclusion is a very promising approach.
A comment from Merkur editor Dieter Dorby.
When the adventure playground on Nordgraben was built around 40 years ago, it set new standards with its imagination and versatility.
Countless children - not only from Miesbach - have played there and grew up with him.
With the idea of enabling inclusion here, too, we are going down a new path.
Admittedly: Inclusion and accessibility are on everyone's lips, but in the area of children's playgrounds the topic of handicap is usually not considered - probably because it is lacking in general awareness without malicious intent.
Therefore, the inclusion approach for the adventure playground would have the far-reaching advantage of being able to illustrate how inclusion can be achieved in playgrounds.
Also read:
Miesbach is breaking new ground - a dilapidated adventure playground should offer inclusion in the future
Against this background, the idea of tearing down the playground and then installing a replacement building for the ailing homeless shelter on this area on the north ditch can hardly exist.
Both concerns are justified, but the playground has its ancestral place there, and the development association is still ready to get involved wholeheartedly.
Above all, however, a displacement competition will certainly not bring the homeless shelter the acceptance it needs in the population.
ddy