This story is from October 03, 2017
Students transform abandoned ground into kids’ play area
CHENNAI: Until the middle of September, the ground at a corporation school in
Then, a group of nine
The nine students, all from the
Arvind Samuel, one of the students, said, "We saw a photograph of the corporation middle school
The college students pooled in Rs 5,000 and got to work. "A lot of the construction material dumped there included bits of broken concrete blocks with sharp edges that could be dangerous. We then re-arranged the Kadapa stones, concrete rings, broken bricks and gave the walls a fresh coat of paint, complete with excercise postures," said Arvind.
The students cleared the thick vegetation, coverted discarded car tyres, bamboo shades and other material into play material and also put up a garden. "It was part of our college project and all nine of us contributed equally in clearing the debris. The smile on the chidren’s faces after we beautified the park was more than enough for us," he added.
And the children were indeed thrilled. P Kumar, one of the students of the middle school, said that they had no place to play for almost one year. "None was bothered to clean up the ground. We are grateful to the students who spent so much of their time in clearing the ground personally and breathing new life into it," he said.
When contacted, an assistant engineer of
RA Puram
was a virtual ‘no go’ area for its children full of overgrown vegetation and indiscriminately dumped construction debris.students
from a private deemed university read about the state of the ground at N S Garden on Park View Road in a newspaper and decided to do something about it. A week later, excited children were swarming all over the facility that had been transformed into a shining new play area.The nine students, all from the
architecture department
atHindustan University
, said they had merely re-arranged the construction material that had been haphazardly dumped at the ground and given the existing play equipment a fresh coat of paint.Arvind Samuel, one of the students, said, "We saw a photograph of the corporation middle school
playground
in a vernacular newspaper and decided we should do something for the children who were not able to play there. Two trees had been uprooted by Cyclone Vardah in December last year and construction debris was spread all over."The college students pooled in Rs 5,000 and got to work. "A lot of the construction material dumped there included bits of broken concrete blocks with sharp edges that could be dangerous. We then re-arranged the Kadapa stones, concrete rings, broken bricks and gave the walls a fresh coat of paint, complete with excercise postures," said Arvind.
The students cleared the thick vegetation, coverted discarded car tyres, bamboo shades and other material into play material and also put up a garden. "It was part of our college project and all nine of us contributed equally in clearing the debris. The smile on the chidren’s faces after we beautified the park was more than enough for us," he added.
And the children were indeed thrilled. P Kumar, one of the students of the middle school, said that they had no place to play for almost one year. "None was bothered to clean up the ground. We are grateful to the students who spent so much of their time in clearing the ground personally and breathing new life into it," he said.
Greater Chennai Corporation
at RA Puram said it was not clear if the civic body’s permission was sought in this case. "In future, anyone wanting to launch such initiatives should coordinate with the corporation authorities," he said.Popular from City
- Self-drive trip to Madikeri turns nightmare: Bengaluru students assaulted, extorted Rs 50,000 by rental agents
- 'Crossed all limits': Kolkata model's towel dance for International Men's Day at India Gate goes viral
- Dehradun accident: What happened in the last moments before 6 friends died in horrific car crash
- Multi-model transit hubs at five key junctions to be linked with Delhi-Alwar rapid rail
- Mumbai IT firm’s top executive duped of Rs 6.3 crore in biggest online fraud in Pune so far
end of article
Trending Stories
- Maharashtra elections 2024: Where and how to watch election vote counting live
- Maharashtra polls: Devendra Fadnavis-Mohan Bhagwat meet fuels murmurs on CM post
- Quarrel over local train seat, 16-year-old stabs man to death at Ghatkopar station
- Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce must adhere to the Chiefs' rules, including a pre-game sleepover ban
- 9 Ways to Build Confidence for Public Speaking at Any Age
- IND vs AUS 1st Test Live Streaming: When and Where to Watch India vs Australia Live in India, USA, and Australia
- No evidence linking PM Modi, Jaishankar, NSA Doval to criminal activity: Canada
Visual Stories
- 10 easy South Indian snacks for Friday evenings
- 7 genetic traits that babies get from their dad
- 10 good habits of parents that make kids disciplined
- 7 low-maintenance animals to keep as pets
- 10 Korean dishes that are getting popular in India
TOP TRENDS
UP NEXT
Start a Conversation
Post comment