A Vibrant Hub of Inclusive Play
Hamilton Park in Pomona, California features a culturally Mexican-themed playground structure designed by California-based landscape architecture firm Architerra Design Group for 2-5-year-old and 5-12-year-old children of all abilities, complete with colorful rubberized surfacing to protect from falls. Around the edge, panels display words in both Spanish and English such as "Sonrisa / Smile" or "Semilla / Seed."
The city of Pomona, California recently unveiled Hamilton Park - its first all-abilities playground. The renovated park prioritizes safety enhancements and accessibility, including measures that deter unauthorized use and prevent young children from venturing onto busy streets, all while providing play opportunities for children of all abilities. Ultimately, the city wanted to create an inclusive, welcoming park that serves the needs of all members of the underserved community. California-based landscape architecture firm Architerra Design Group accomplished those desires while also paying homage to the history and culture of the surrounding community. In partnership with civil and electrical engineers, the Landscape Architects provided comprehensive design services for the park, including site planning, community workshops, design development, and the creation of detailed construction documents. Designed with community input, this vibrant space boasts a range of features designed to accommodate children of all abilities, ensuring that they can participate in physical, sensory, and social play experiences.
A bridge connects the two universally accessible play structures with an entry platform. The shade toppers are inspired by traditional Mexican dancer dresses.
Hamilton Park features a thoughtfully designed landscape with distinct play zones for toddlers (2-5 years) and older children (5-12 years), each with age-appropriate, graduated risk play elements. The playground contains inclusive and sensory play equipment set on a colorful, rubberized surface inspired by a vibrant pi??ata color palette. Some key inclusive elements include adaptive swings with cradle-like seats that provide support and enjoyment for children with varying needs, a fully accessible rocking ride for children in wheelchairs, an inclusive whirl play feature that offers a sensory experience for children of all abilities, and finally, animal-themed play structures like a stone horse and jaguar that add a touch of whimsy and encourage imaginative play.
The center of the park features a large rain garden with drought-tolerant plantings designed to capture water from a one-inch-per-hour storm. Next to the rain garden is a 22-foot hexagonal picnic shade shelter from ICON Shelter Systems. The park also features a piñata party area with a preset pole and whimsical synthetic surfacing, dual half-court basketball courts, community garden plots, horseshoe pits, and a futsal field (top right corner) with custom-designed goals embedded in synthetic turf and surrounded by natural turf.
In the foreground, the design of the accessible glider swing and the dual tower structure with a large slide and roofs are inspired by papel picado, colorful tissue paper cut into intricate patterns and hung as decoration. A skyway hive bridge connects the two towers.
The view from the southern entry to the park showcases permeable pavers, new LED lighting, a small bioretention garden to the left for onsite rainwater capture, and the custom playground structure.
As seen in LASN magazine, February 2025.