Indoor Art Playgrounds

View More

The Playground is an Interactive Show at the National Building Museum

The Playground is an interactive installation designed by Snarkitecture for the Great Hall of the National Building Museum in Washington, DC. Spanning the museum's historic interior, the project is the institution's largest indoor installation and features nine play zones arranged across recycled flooring. The spaces reinterpret familiar playground elements using construction materials associated with the built environment, encouraging visitors of different ages to engage through exploration, movement, and creative play. The installation combines recreational activities with references to architecture and construction.

The central feature is a stepped birch plywood structure known as The Hill, which incorporates slides, tunnels, and seating areas. Additional attractions include the Wavy Walls maze, a cork-filled Dig Pit, climbing elements, hammock structures supported by red-painted steel frames, an obstacle course, and an Adventure Yard stocked with wood, piping, and metal components for hands-on building activities.

Trend Themes

  1. Immersive Museum Play — Cultural venues are expanding beyond passive exhibits into tactile, movement-based environments that create new value through repeatable, family-friendly experiential programming.
  2. Architectural Play Installations — Play spaces inspired by building materials and construction forms point to fresh crossover potential between design education, recreation, and public engagement.
  3. Recycled Material Environments — Temporary installations using reused flooring, cork, wood, and industrial components demonstrate how sustainability can become a visible part of visitor experience design.

Industry Implications

  1. Museums and Galleries — Interactive indoor attractions give institutions new ways to diversify audiences, extend dwell time, and position exhibitions as participatory social destinations.
  2. Architecture and Design — Built-environment studios can translate spatial concepts into accessible public experiences, creating commercial relevance beyond traditional buildings and interiors.
  3. Family Entertainment — Hybrid playgrounds that blend climbing, building, mazes, and creative exploration reflect demand for indoor destinations with educational and design-led appeal.

Related Ideas

Similar Ideas
VIEW FULL ARTICLE