Skip to main content

Keeping kids cool on the playground

ASU heat researchers offer tips for playing safely this summer


Children on a playground
June 26, 2020

Editor's note: As Arizona continues to battle COVID-19, please follow social distancing and face covering guidelines in public at all times, including playgrounds.

A day at the playground can be tempting on a bright sunny day, but in the Arizona heat, it can also be dangerous.

Children playing outside during Arizona summers can face 100 days or more of temperatures north of 100°F. Too often playgrounds use heat-retaining, unnatural surfaces in the middle of parks with no shade, especially in Phoenix. These unshaded playgrounds can act as mini heat islands, which can disincentivize physically active play or even lead to burns.

ASU urban climate researchers Jennifer Vanos and Ariane Middel believe proper shading of playgrounds may be a solution.

“Shade protects children from the sun and keeps playground equipment cool and touchable,” said Middel. Their research provides insight into these spaces, as well as tips on keeping children safe in the heat.

Playground safety infographic

Infographic by Alex Davis/Media Relations and Strategic Communications

More Health and medicine

 

Portrait of Moira McCatherine standing in front of a screen projecting her research project.

Nursing student wins top award for research on neonatal opioid withdrawal

An experience Moira MacCatherine had as a teenager volunteering in a Level III neonatal intensive care unit impacted her in such a way that it would later inspire her research as a nursing major at…

Palo Verde Blooms

College of Health Solutions course to explore science behind longevity, well-being

Arizona State University’s College of Health Solutions has responded to the surge in interest in blue zones — those rare communities where some of the oldest people on Earth reside — with a new, self…

Molly Loughran standing in front of a projector screen with a microphone

ASU center hosts community gathering to discuss latest health research

Communication and collaboration were front and center as Arizona State University’s Center for Health Information and Research, or CHiR, met with community partners and other stakeholders on April 3…