Lincoln Park and Lakeview are always hopping. And swinging. And sliding. And climbing. You get the idea — they have great playgrounds! If you live in the area or are looking for a great place to park-crawl for the day, these are the ones you really want to check out. Click through for the 411 on splash pads, spraygrounds, playlots and more.

South Lakeview Playground Park

Or, as locals call it, "Blue Park." Have a blast on three play structures, swings and basketball court. In summer, the water sprayer is a great place to romp and doesn't get nearly as crowded as its popular neighbor, Adams Playground Park. Speaking of ... click to the next slide.

1300 W. Wolfram St. (312-742-7785 or chicagoparkdistrict.com)

What is YOUR favorite playground in Lincoln Park or Lakeview? Let us know in the Comments!

— Kelly Aiglon, with additional reporting by Mistie Lucht & Selena Kohng

Looking for a new playground stomping ground? Go north! Chicago’s North Shore has lots of options for sliding, swinging, climbing and running like the dickens. Whether you live “up north” or are looking for a day trip, flip through our album to discover the ultimate playgrounds. You’ll go bananas at everything from mega splash pads to all-natural wood gems.

Crestwood Park – Northbrook

With all-new playground equipment in 2013, this oasis is in sparkling shape. (Fun fact: The Northbrook Park District donated its old playground structures to the non-profit Kids Around the World, which shipped it to Uganda for needful children to enjoy.) While Mom and Dad get their blood pumping on the new exercise equipment -- a chest press, leg press and elliptical trainer -- kiddos have a heyday on three slides, a lookout tower, lily pad stools and an adaptive swing. There's a smaller playground set for toddlers, plus plenty of picnic space.

1824 Milton Ave.
Northbrook
847-291-2960
Online: nbparks.org

 

What is YOUR favorite playground on the North Shore? Let us know in the Comments!

— Kelly Aiglon

The Bay Area is home to some of the best playgrounds in the country, but children with special needs haven’t always been able to share in the fun … until now. Palo Alto’s brand new all-inclusive Magical Bridge Playground goes way beyond wheelchair ramps: think wheelchair-accessible treehouses, signs in braille, bucket swings, and wide slides. It’s truly a place where children of all abilities can play side by side.


Photo Credit: Bonggamom on Google+

Building Bridges: The Story Behind the Playground
The Magical Bridge Playground is the brainchild of Palo Alto parent Olenka Villareal. Her daughter Ava was born with developmental challenges, and Olenka quickly realized there were no places where she could take Ava to play. Olenka envisioned a playground where kids of any ability could have fun and feel included. When she couldn’t find one, she set out to create her own.

It took 6 years and over $3 million to make Olenka’s vision a reality, but the result is nothing short of magical: the first truly inclusive playground in the Bay Area. The Magical Bridge Playground is a place so accessible that children with varying disabilities can play, and so cool that typically developing children want to join in the fun.

Fun for Everyone
The smiles begin as soon as you enter the playground area: Sensors built into the main entrance wall trigger a series of soothing sounds as you cross the threshold. The playground has everything little ones need for hours of swinging, sliding, spinning, climbing, and pretending. Bucket swings let groups of children swing together, and spinning coocoons will make kids dizzy with happiness. A two-story play house is set among the trees, and a swinging bridge leads young adventurers to a slide hill, with multiple paths to the bottom. There’s even a place for the littlest tots, with a mini play structure and a set of musical bells.


Photo credit: Magical Bridge Playground

On Top of the World
The playground’s piece de resistance, a giant two-story play house, was designed by local artist Barbara Butler. Inspired by her own free-range childhood, Barbara set out to create a magical space filled with nooks and crannies for kids to escape to. Colorful accents, large windows, and a simple floor plan help visually impaired individuals navigate throughout. The second floor looks out onto a stage area, where budding performers can sing or act their hearts out. Both floors are wheelchair accessible, so kids and adults in wheelchairs can enjoy the sensation of living in the treetops. Even the swinging bridge leading to the slide hill is wheelchair accessible.


Photo credit: Magical Bridge Playground on Flickr, Bonggamom on Google+

Music to Our Ears
Kids of all ages are sure to enjoy the playground’s Light Harp, a 20-foot arch whose “harp strings” are actually invisible laser beams spanning the top of the arch to the playground floor. Movement across the beams triggers soothing, musical sounds; wave your hands hands, arms, legs across the arch, or use your entire body to create sweet music.


Photo credit: Magical Bridge Playground on Facebook

Thoughtful Touches
Magical Bridge Playground is designed to allow individuals—children, teens, and adults—with disabilities to access each and every attraction. Among the inclusive features: signs in braille, bucket swings for individuals with limited upper body strength, slides with rollers for individuals with limited mobility, wheelchair-accessible teeter-totters and merry-go-rounds, wide pathways, nooks and quiet areas for overstimulated kids, lots of hand railings, and trees for shade. One of our favorite features is a slide with an extra-wide landing area, so that kids who need a moment to get back up (or into their wheelchair) can scoot over and let the next kid in line slide down.


Photo credit: Magical Bridge Playground on Facebook

Good to know
The closest parking is located at the adjacent Abilities United center, a non profit that supports children and adults with disabilities. Additional parking is located at the Mitchell Park Library, and restrooms are located across the bridge at the Mitchell Park Playground. The closest snack bar is Ada’s Cafe at the Mitchell Park Library; in addition, an Ada’s Cafe snack cart, staffed by disabled individuals with the help of Abilities United volunteers, will make its way to Magical Bridge once a day to sell their goodies.

Magical Bridge Playground
Mitchell Park
600 E. Meadow Dr.
Palo Alto, Ca
650-463-4900
magicalbridge.org

Have you been to Magical Bridge Playground yet? What was your favorite feature?

—Ana Picazo

Yee-haw! Swinging, climbing and sliding season is just getting started — and there are so many places to jump into the action. Chicago has more than 500 playgrounds. And 77 will be rehabbed or built this year, thanks to Mayor Emanuel’s Chicago Plays! program. Flip through our album to see our “best” list, from ginormous slides to beachside gems to great terrain for toddlers. And keep a lookout for our best of the suburbs picks, coming soon.

Best Pirate Adventure: Supera Playlot Park

With two ship-themed play structures (one for the bigs, one for the littles), a boat-shaped sandbox and sea animal riding structures, this playground will have you yelling “Ahoy mateys!” Find it at 2528 N. Racine St. in Lincoln Park. Online: chicagoparkdistrict.com

Others to sail away with:
“Boat” Playground: 3300 N. Lake Shore Dr., Belmont Harbor
Margate Park: 4921 N. Marine Dr., Uptown

Photo: Munira B. via Yelp

What is YOUR favorite playground in Chicago? Let us know in the Comments!

— Mistie Lucht

Give your kids an outlet for their circus acts besides jumping on the couch in the living room. Let them catch serious air on a (low) flying trapeze or swinging on silks with the following aerial classes made just for your pint-sized circus clowns.

photo: Do Jump! courtesy of Echo Theater

Do Jump!
Kids (and adults) can’t stop smiling when swinging from a trapeze. Do Jump! has classes for toddlers, kids and families and focuses on physical theater and circus arts, like trapeze and acrobatics, offered in a non-competitive environment. Their camps and workshops are for toddlers on up through adults. For the youngest in your crew, there’s the Baby Circus class exploring a low flying trapeze, basic acrobatics and juggling for kiddos 1.5-3.5 years old. Family Circus is for kids, ages two and up, with an adult.

Echo Theatre, 1515 SE 37th Ave.
Multnomah Arts Center, 7688 SW Capitol Hwy.
503-231-1232
Online: dojump.org

The Circus Project
Multi-level classes allow for bigger kids, eight and up, to progress at their own levels and focus on static trapeze, aerial fabric and aerial hoop. The small teacher-to student ratios allow the instructors to help students work on their own creative expression, as well as their aerial technique, stability, flexibility and strength in this supportive group environment.  Winter session’s Aerial class for youth runs Sunday, January 11-March 15.

The Friendly House Community Center
1737 NW 26th Ave.
503-764-9174
Online: thecircusproject.org

AWOL Dance Collective
Trapeze and aerial yoga reign supreme here. Youth programs run for eight weeks and include an informal showcase of what the kids learned on the last class. Keep a close eye on the website as classes are announced two weeks prior to start. When you see a class session your child would love to attend, just e-mail fly@awoldance.org with name, age and desired day/time of class to register.

513 NE Schuyler St.
503-351-5182
Online: awoldance.org

Has your little one explored the trapeze yet? Let us know in the comments below!

-Suzie Ridgway

Since your little one entered your life, you’ve become a bona fide paparazzi. Those chubby cheeks, that button nose — who can blame you? Check out this list of must-snap pics that capture baby’s everyday life in the most precious (and hilarious) ways. Then take your own and light up your Facebook feed.

1. Taking their first selfie.

 

2. Putting foot in mouth. #babiesarecontortionists

photo: Jim Champion via Flickr

3. Making their first stink face.

 

4. Jumbled group shot! (Good try.)

 

5. Getting down to business.

photo: Tzuhsun Hsu via Flickr

6. Cozying up with the incredible shrinking plushie.

 

7. Sitting next to (or even inside!) the most ginormous pumpkin ever.

photo: Abigail Batchelder via Flickr

8. Stealing toys at a play date.

 

9. Meeting the family dog.

photo: Jason Vasquez via Flickr

10. Sleeping sweetly with a sibling.

photo: Tzuhsun Hsu via Flickr

11. Licking ice cream or a popsicle for the first time (looks so good but the cold hurts so bad!).

 

12. Swinging in the baby swing at the park, happy as a clam.

 

13. Wearing oversized sunglasses like a rock star.

 

14. Twin photo opp! Sporting Thing 1 and Thing 2 onesies.

 

15. First “mug shot.” (Arrested for having a diaper blowout at the bank.)

 

Do you have ideas for fun photos to take of your baby? Share your photo with us and email editor@tinybeans.go-vip.net, or tell us about it in the Comments!

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Compiled by Ayren Jackson-Cannady, Erin Feher, Meghan Rose, Leah Singer, Ruby Germain, Katrina Burrows, Francie Kaplan, Mandy Hale, Jacqui Boland, Erin Lem & Kelly Aiglon

Your little monkey loves to climb, climb, climb. When he or she gets tired of scurrying up the ladders at the playground, head to an indoor tree house. You’ll find big, faux trees made just for kids at special spots around town, and they’re well worth the trip. Click through our album to see where you can make like Tarzan and Jane — swinging, climbing, sliding and playing the day away.

Treetop Canopy Climbing Adventure at Lincoln Park Zoo

The next time you say "hello" to the wild animals, make a pit stop at the Treetop Canopy inside the Children's Zoo. Nearly sweeping the ceiling with a maze of sturdy ropes and tunnels, this oasis looks like something out of Swiss Family Robinson. Climbers go in one side and climber higher to the middle and back down to the other side, and the fun is figuring out which opening will lead them the way that they want to go. It's a great spot to let active kids blow off some steam, and escape the cold or rain. Stick around inside to check out the small animal exhibits; there are turtles, snails and otters ready to meet you.

Entrance to Zoo at Fullerton Pkwy. & Cannon Dr.
Lincoln Park
312-742-2000
Online: lpzoo.org
Admission is free

What is your favorite indoor play space? Let us know in the Comments!

— Tiana Kubik

New York City parents need playgrounds as much as they need air: to stave off the tedium of our apartments and give kids a chance to roam. But when your closest playground starts to feel like your backyard and your neighborhood starts to feel like your living room, its time to cross some borders. With this handy guide, a visit to a new playground comes complete with a great bite to eat because after all of that running, swinging, sliding and climbing, your kid is sure to work up an appetite.

Play at Tompkins Square Playground, Eat at Dumpling Man

With baby swings, a sandbox, three jungle gyms, tire swings and a sprinkler, there’s something for everyone at Tompkins Square Playground. After a morning of running themselves ragged, hungry kids will love an order of dumplings from the Dumpling Man. It opens at 11:30 a.m., and though there’s no room inside for strollers, you can park yours on the sidewalk and eat at the outdoor (and below street level) countertop and bench.

Go: Tompkins Square Park, East 9th St. at Ave A; Dumpling Man, 100 St. Marks Pl., East Village

Do you have a favorite playground and lunch combo? Share your tips in a Comment below.

All images by Anna Knoebel

–Anna Knoebel

The start of the school year can be a hectic time: back-to-school shopping, signing up for activities, sports practices, the list goes on and on. But as the kids settle into the groove, it’s time for you to take some much-deserved time out, and nothing spells relaxing like a fresh glass of wine from local grape growers. 7×7 Magazine has put together a fabulous list of urban wineries in the Bay Area, which will turn a frantic fall into a soothing and delicious autumn.

The 2011 growing season, which will forever be remembered as cool, damp and unpredictable for Northern California, is coming to a merciful close. But don’t feel bad if you didn’t make it up to Wine Country to experience the full thrill of harvest (trust us, the traffic was terrible anyway). This week, the grapes are coming to you.

The following urban wineries are still bringing in fruit and they wouldn’t mind one bit if you stopped by to lend a hand, taste some juice, and find out once and for all what the difference is between wild and cultured yeast.

Dogpatch WineWorks’ shiny new crushpad will be awash with Merlot and Petite Verdot from the Coombsville area of Napa this week. And, to complete their Bordeaux-style blends, superstar cousins Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Franc will be arriving the week of October 24th. If you’re interested in playing winemaker, ask about the WineWorks’ custom crush options and next year, you can be the one deciding whether or not to inoculate.

If you’re more into Rhone varietals or would just like to know what a “Rhone varietal” is, Carlotta Cellars, a label that uses the WineWorks facility, will be competing for space on the crushpad to process their Carignan, Grenache and Mourvedre this week and next. Email proprietor David Grega david@carlottawines.com if you are interested in swinging by.

Dogpatch WineWorks – 2455 Third St. (at 22nd Street), 415-525-4440

To see more great wineries, read the full 7×7 article here.

Written by Courtney Humiston

This is our weekly guest post from our friends at 7×7, a site that keeps you up on the best of SF. We’ve teamed up for an exciting partnership to bring you a fantastic Date Night idea each week. Be sure to check out their blog for hourly doses of the best of SF.