2026.06.12
Posted By: Peter
Some clients need convincing. This one already had a playground from us. It worked so well that when they opened a second family café in Texas, they came straight back. Trust was already in the bank.
The new space: 200 square meters of play area with 4.8‑meter ceilings. Not huge, but tall enough for real vertical play.
They wanted a countryside village theme – warm, cozy, and nothing like the neon‑filled arcades. We wrapped the entire playground frame in decorative panels to look like one big house. From the outside, children see a giant cottage. Once inside, the house opens up into a small village of activities.
Slides wind down from the upper floor. Soft play structures in muted barn red, cream, and sage green fill the corners. Interactive playhouses let kids run their own “farm stand” or “baker’s shop.” An electric merry‑go‑round (child‑safe, slow speed) sits near the entrance. A deep ball pit waits behind a faux stable door. And threading through everything is a mini obstacle course – low tunnels, balance pads, and small climbing bumps.
This client is detail‑oriented – the kind who catches things others miss. They decided to handle installation themselves this time, without our on‑site team. We made sure they could.
We sent detailed blueprints with every measurement. We filmed tutorial videos for the tricky parts – frame assembly, panel alignment, merry‑go‑round anchoring. And we individually labeled every single part. Bolt A goes into Panel B. Slide C attaches to Platform D. No guessing. The client pulled it off without a single call for help.
The first location still runs smoothly. The second opened to local families who now have two spots for birthday parties, weekday coffee breaks, and rainy afternoon escapes. The client keeps coming back not because we chased them – but because we made the second build as easy as the first.
Local Texas families love both cafés. And for us, that’s the only metric that matters
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