Laserfiche WebLink
SECTION 11. PLAYGROUND DESCRIPTIONS <br />Alpine Park <br />Alpine Park is a larger community park located in central Ramsey along the south side of Alpine <br />Drive, approximately 1 mile east of Ramsey Boulevard and 1/3 mile west of Sunfish Lake <br />Boulevard. Park amenities include four baseball diamonds and batting cages as well as a skate park. <br />Its playground was completed in 2000. The playground uses engineered wood fiber for surfacing. <br />The playground consists of two components, a wooden swing set and a wooden composite play <br />structure. The swing set has two sections, one section with a single plastic chair swing and the other <br />section with two normal belt swings. The playground structure consists of one plastic slide with <br />parallel ramps. A metal, vertically curved set of six parallel monkey bars is connected to the rest of <br />the set via a low transfer surface. Opposite the monkey bars is a wooden ladder with two steps that <br />connect to the rest of the structure. <br />There are five means of entry the aforementioned transfer surface and ladder, a wooden staircase, <br />a chain link ladder (with four parallel chains) with metal footings, a chain link ladder on the interior <br />of the structure which three rubber tires serving as steps, and a wooden climbing wall (sloped <br />roughly 60 degrees with the ground) with six wooden steps and a rope for balance. The bottom of <br />the climbing wall is worn, likely due to use as an additional step. The protective covering on the <br />rope is worn and the metal inside of the rope is exposed in places. The rope has also been stretched <br />considerably. <br />The entire surface of the structure is wooden with the exception of a bridge, which has a rubber mat <br />for a surface. The bridge is sloped slightly (less than 15 degrees) from one end to the other, however <br />there are four peaks on the rubber surface with thin wooden planks on top. The rubber surface is <br />somewhat worn and there are cross slopes in some places that are unrelated to the design. The chains <br />for both ladders are in fairly good condition. The wood throughout the structure ranges from okay <br />to poor condition visually. The wood on the supports for the tallest portion of the structure (i.e. the <br />area withthe wooden climbing wall) is in the poorest condition with several of the planks making up <br />horizontal and diagonal supports being splintered. The playground also has talk tubes (metal <br />megaphone toys through which children may communicate with one another through opposite ends), <br />which are both in good working condition. <br />Figure 20: Alpine Park Playground <br />10 <br />