Move over, slides and swings. Landscape Structures is bringing electronic activities to American playgrounds.
The Delano-based manufacturer of school and park equipment has launched Pulse, a line of outdoor, multisensory games that engage kids in high-action, electronic versions of tennis, table tennis or tag.
Pulse game stations resemble parking meter stands but have the kind of game show buzzer-bubbles that contestants love to slap. Each post is waterproof, lights up, plays music, bleeps, zoinks and emits colorful swirls of LED lights in response to an opponent's speedy touch.
Sounds and lights from one perky pod will encourage a player to dash to the pod before the light or sound dies. Each tap on the bubble prompts a crazed reaction from pods on the opponents' side of the court or table. That prompts lots of giggles, concentration and dashing from opponents.
"It's interactive and competitive and really keeps them moving," said Patrick Faust, the Landscape Structures president, who gave Pulse a whirl during a recent convention with 300 employees and 300 sales representatives. "I was laughing and bumping into people and huffing and puffing. It was a lot of fun," he said.
It took five employees, two years and hundreds of thousands dollars for Landscape Structures to bring Pulse to market. So far, prototypes are in parks in Delano, Phoenix and Omaha. A fourth is headed soon to the Sensory Processing Disorder Foundation in Colorado, which offered insights about how helpful the equipment could be for children with sensory issues.
If successful, Pulse could dramatically expand Landscape Structures' sales and keep its workers busier for years to come. The employee-owned manufacturer already brings in more than $90 million in sales making regular playground structures for companies around the globe. The new games range in price from $12,995 to $15,850.
Faust and Landscape Structures CEO Steve King expect it will take two years of marketing before orders really take off. They hope Pulse will become a standard addition to many of the 75,000 school, park and amusement park playgrounds the company has built around the world.