The park at Myrtle Road Reserve in Claremont Meadows is an older style park but serviceable, it has shade cloth and plenty of seating for adults, plenty of parking and an exercise area.
Robinson Park, Jamisontown
We visited this park in Jamisontown that has recently had a shade cloth added. It has a set of play equipment for your older kids, a set for the little tykes, an undercover picnic bench, and it is set on a big block with plenty of space for children to go off ‘exploring’ together (as my Miss 5 and Miss 7 like to do).
Robinson Park has a great play area for littler siblings, including a xylophone, and a little rubber section that they can walk under/through that my kids enjoyed. The area for bigger kids has a few different climbing options, and my two loved the platform because it meant that their feet were up higher than my head, they felt very top of the world. They also love a double slide.
The picnic table and a council bin make it easy for parents to have a rest, but there are also a few picnic benches and blocks of sandstone scattered around for resting on. There are swings and balancing beams next to the picnic bench.
This park includes -
Balancing beam
Cargo net
Covered picnic table
Free
Monkey bars
Pretend cafe
Seats for adults
Shade Cloth
Slides (including double slide)
Swings
Boronia Park, Jordan Springs
Linear Park, Mulgoa Rise
Steamroller Park, Cambridge Park
I love this park, I used to play here as a kid, I just wish people would stop vandalising things so that they could unfence the steamroller (or perhaps that is an insurance issue).
This park is great for older primary school aged children. My children struggle with this park, they cannot for instance climb onto the swings (they are too high) and even if they climb the ladder or the cargo net, they cannot step from it to the platform without help as their legs are too short. So a smaller child will need help. If you have older children I am sure this park will be popular because of the flying fox. This flying fox doesn’t have a seat, just the little disc you balance on.
So the park has the following -
Slide
Shade cloth
Swings
Cargo net
Pretend cafe
Flying fox
Path (for a walk)
Covered picnic table
Seats for adults
I actually came to this park because I needed a short walk, due to a back injury, and I knew there was a paved path. It doesn’t wrap around the block, it ends in odd places, so you cannot do laps per se, but if you have a young child who likes to go for a walk, or draw on the sidewalk with chalk, or an old injured Mum who needs a short walk, then the path is good.
This park is on a large block so there is plenty of parking around it, it is on the corner of Victoria Street and Richmond Road in Cambridge Park.
Where is it?
It is on the corner of Victoria Street and Richmond Road in Cambridge Park, which Google tells me is 195 Victoria Street, Cambridge Park in New South Wales.
Twickenham Avenue, Cambridge Park
Church Street Reserve, Windsor
We quite accidentally ended up at this park yesterday, it was a great park with clean toilets, undercover seating and plenty of parking. When I started this project I wondered if there was such a thing as a park with no slide, it turns out there is. The climbing frame is also quite different, but that can be good, gives kids something new.
There is a set of swings, a climbing frame, a pretend cafe, covered seating (though it is a fair way away from the equipment) and a merry-go-round.
I took a photo (below) of the metal animal on the flying fox because honestly, my first thought was, who would put a bat on kids equipment? It wasn’t until I got home that I realised oh, it is a flying fox.
I was frustrating that the seat for the flying fox is literally as high as my head, below is a photo of me (six foot tall) standing next to the seat. I tried walking the seat to both ends and it doesn't get shorter. I don't know if this is intentional to stop older kids getting in, but it definitely required me lifting my child quite high (I am not sure a short parent could do it) and it requires the child having muscle strength and balance to sit upright in it while I try and manipulate the buckles, while it is trying to glide away from me. I know the gliding is always a problem, but when the seats are at a normal height I can use my body or leg to block it while I am buckling the child. This doesn’t seem like a seat that could be used by people with differing abilities.
Apart from that it was a great park, we will be back. This park is located at Church Street, it is in South Windsor.
Mulgoa Park, Mulgoa
Carmel Kennedy Memorial Park, Kingswood
I am actually not 100% sure what this park is called, it is on Second Avenue in Kingswood, across the road from Kingswood Public School, and next to Chapman Gardens Oval. This is a good park for a range of ages, the ropes are for older kids and there are toddler options too.
There is a structure that is essentially for younger kids, with a shorter slide, stairs up to the platform, and noughts and crosses and an abacus. There is also a larger rope climbing structure that is difficult for a younger child to meaningfully use. There is a sunshade and seating for the adults. There are swings including a nest swing. Whenever I am there there is a range of children of different ages on the equipment. There is some parking, though you probably don’t want to be trying to park there at school drop off or pick up time.
Ironbark Drive Park, Cranebrook
Lions Park, Emu Plains
Lions Park is located on the corner of the Great Western Highway and Park Street, Emu Plains. It is behind the community centre, and it has toilets and quite a bit of undercover seating for parents. The parking on Park Street is a bit tight, I imagine on the weekends you would need to park in a side street.
I only have two basic photos but the website for Moduplay actually has detailed photos, you can have a look at those here.
This park has swings, a slide, and plenty of climbing options that don’t fit the usual box. There is a balancing beam, a small rock climbing wall, and a fence all of the way around. The fence doesn’t have a gate, but the opening is where the seats for the adults are. This is also next to a cricket or footy oval with a concrete pathway wrapping around it, that is great for a walk or a bigger bike ride (not toddlers it is a bit long).