At Schools Citywide, NYC Students Are Transforming Playgrounds — and Themselves
Renaud: A pink basketball court, hair braiding station and butterfly garden are some of the ideas kids came up with for remaking their schoolyards.
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Pink basketball courts, a hair braiding station and a butterfly garden. These are just some of the innovative ideas that New York City schoolchildren came up with when they were actively engaged in the planning and design process to transform their schoolyards into vibrant public spaces that better serve themselves and their communities.
Anyone familiar with NYC knows that while it has some of the most iconic green spaces in the world, from to the , it also has a shocking number of neighborhoods with almost .
This is where schoolyard transformations come in. Every NYC neighborhood has a public school, and most of them have outdoor yards. For years, various initiatives have taken those city-owned spaces, often covered in asphalt, and opened them up to millions of students and nearby residents for recreation and relaxation.
Nationwide, the Trust for Public Land and other partners have transformed — including New York, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Minnesota and California — over the past 25 years, playing a vital role and combatting by planting trees and replacing blacktop with permeable surfaces.
But there’s another, unexpected benefit from this work. It turns out that involving students in the design process has been a powerful lever for learning and leadership, unlocking children’s creativity while planting seeds of inspiration and ambition.
Engaging students as young as third grade gives them something they rarely experience elsewhere: genuine agency. For many, it may be the first time they’ve had a real say in shaping their everyday environment — and their first real encounter with collective decision-making and the democratic process.
It gives them purpose and ownership and helps them see how their input matters through consultation with an array of stakeholders, from school principals and city agencies to PTAs and community groups.
Our design process starts with a schoolwide assembly where the project is explained and the outcomes explored. That is followed by a survey where every student can offer ideas about what the new playground might look like.
About 30 student volunteers are then selected to make up the design team — in cases where an elementary, middle and high school share a schoolyard, the design team will have representatives from all three levels.

During four sessions over a three-month period, students measure their schoolyards, visit completed projects for ideas and interact with landscape architects, general contractors, engineers and other professionals about the project — getting invaluable exposure to career opportunities along the way.
We emphasize to the students the importance of making the schoolyard design work
for everybody. They figure out what they want during the day, but they also have survey input from parents and other community members about how they’d like to use the space after school and on weekends.
The kids are often the ones who come up with the most innovative and impactful ideas.
At a Bronx elementary school, girls loved playing basketball, but boys often took over both of the playground’s courts at recess. So the girls asked if one of the courts could be painted pink. Of course, anyone could play there. But the boys tended to avoid it, and the girls finally had an equal chance to play basketball in their yard.

At a Harlem elementary school, students wanted a space for braiding hair during recess, so they designed one: a two-tiered seating area built for exactly that. It’s the kind of idea no adult would have thought to ask for.

Meanwhile, at an elementary school in Queens, students wanted a wildlife viewing area, so they selected plants known to attract butterflies — such as lavender and Joe Pye Weed — and planted them in the schoolyard. They added birdhouses and bat boxes, too, turning a concrete corner into a small urban sanctuary.
The payoff of these transformed spaces extends well beyond recess, yielding numerous positive effects in the classroom. There’s research showing that exposure to nature can help . It can also lead to .
That’s a fantastic perk for any public school. Now, imagine multiplying that across an entire city. In New York, more than 240 schoolyards have been reimagined throughout the five boroughs, but there are about 950 citywide, so there are plenty more waiting to be transformed.
The potential is enormous — not just for more equitable access to green space, but for young people to discover that they can make their voices heard, make a difference and actively shape the world around them.
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