Family Days Out: Outdoor Playgrounds Where Kids Can Run Wild And Free

Splash pads, zip wires and more 🙌

The best thing about outdoor playgrounds (when it’s sunny) is that kids can be entertained for hours for free while on the swings, slides and running through tunnels, while you can choose to either get involved with them, or leave them be and set yourself up on the grass to enjoy some peace in the sun.

Either way, the suggestion of heading to a park this weekend will go down well, so we’ve selected five great picks from across the UK. 

1. Coram’s Fields

Where? London - 93 Guilford St, London WC1N 1DN.

It’s a seven-acre park and playground, with equipment for all ages from toddlers up. The large adventure play area is not one to miss, with a zip wire, large slides and a sensory and music area. There are also two large sandpits open all year round and a paddling pool that opens during the spring and summer months. 

2. Endcliffe Park

Where? South Yorkshire - Rustlings Rd, Sheffield, S11 7AB.

The playground went through a three and a half year fundraising campaign to get a huge makeover back in 2008, so it’s well-equipped for kids to roam around for a fair few hours. There’s varied equipment including things for younger children and older, and swings suitable for kids with special needs. An amusement park is also based here, offering fairground fun at weekends for a couple of quid per round.

3. Riverside Park

Where? Chester-le-street, Newcastle - Riverside South, DH3 3SJ. 

Children of all ages can enjoy 5,000 square metres of play area or get their feet wet in the splash pad - perfect for the sunny days. The surrounding gardens also provide a lovely place for relaxation, picnic and family games. 

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Owen Humphreys - PA Images via Getty Images

4. Alum Chine

Where? Westbourne, Bournemouth - Undercliff Promenade, Bournemouth BH4 8AN.

The Alum Chine playground is inspired around a ‘Treasure Island’ and features play elements including a desert island shipwreck, a spyglass hill lookout with a working telescope, a woodland trail which leads to an actual treasure chest and the skeleton of a captain pointing the way to his buried treasure. Other features include water play pumps, as well as the traditional playground items. There’s a toddler padding pool for sunny days. 

5. Walton Park

Where? Manchester - 37 Walton Rd, Sale M33 4AT.

The park is a great place to spend a sunny day with a picnic, as there are various picnic benches and family areas scattered around the greenery. It has two playgrounds - one for smaller kids and toddlers and another more modern one for older kids. There are wooden climbing frames, swings and slides. On Sundays, from 12pm to 4.30pm, take a ride on the miniature steam railway for just 30p - bargain. 

Before You Go

Yes, You CAN Make A Family Walk Fun
Don't say 'who wants to go for a walk?'(01 of08)
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Reframe a walk so it's enticing and exciting using words like explore, play, adventure.Who wants to climb a castle or who wants to find some treasure or skim stones? (credit:Alexander Nicholson via Getty Images)
Don't plod in a straight line - and back again.(02 of08)
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Choose a wiggly walk and terrain made for adventuring. "It's all about keeping children's minds off putting one foot in front of another," says Clare Lewis. (credit:Stephen Lux via Getty Images)
Always have an appealing destination - and make pit-stops along the way.(03 of08)
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It could be a café with their favourite hot chocolate or their 'secret' place like a climbing tree. Make regular stops to admire natural curiosities, make a den, whittle a stick or play in water or whatever you fancy. Encourage your kids to take photos. Clare Lewis's family always take 'scroggin'; a New Zealand name for a hikers' mix of nuts and seeds, dried fruit and chocolate to keep energy levels up. (credit:ArtMarie via Getty Images)
Join forces with another family or get the kids to bring their friends.(04 of08)
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Children love the sociability of a walk and bringing friends increases their activity as they challenge each other to jump the highest or widest, splash in puddles, climb trees or find the best stick. (credit:Alistair Berg via Getty Images)
Walk together in a chatty clod, not a single line with you barking 'come on, keep up'(05 of08)
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There may be times you have to walk in a line, but take turns with who's the leader. Also, let your children choose the route (within reason!). (credit:Bounce via Getty Images)
Play games as you go.(06 of08)
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Hide-and-seek, capture the flag or ambushes - sending kids on ahead so they can jump out on you - are all favourites. Bring a ball or a Frisbee to play with too. (credit:JLPH via Getty Images)
Turn your walk into a treasure hunt. Or an obstacle course.(07 of08)
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Children love places to clamber over like a rocky beach or challenges like climbing trees or jumping over streams. Challenge children to touch that tree and run back, hopscotch between the pavement cracks or run along the low wall. "You could go on a shape walk, finding stones, shells and leaves that are all the same shape," suggests Clare Lewis, co-author of Adventure Walks for Families in and Around London. (credit:Imgorthand via Getty Images)
End on a high.(08 of08)
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Match a walk to your kids' ages. You don't want want to leave them exhausted. Talk up what fun you had, so next time you suggest an adventure walk they leap at the chance. (credit:ArtMarie via Getty Images)