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Dirolep completed a 1800 square meter indoor children's playground project in Australia, and children are very curious about this playground
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Dirolep completed a 1800 square meter indoor children's playground project in Australia, and children are very curious about this playground

2026-03-19

Dirolep completed a 1800 square meter indoor children's playground project in Australia, and children are very curious about this playground

Dirolep is a national high-tech enterprise, a renowned international company in the children's industry integrating R&D, overall planning, design, manufacturing, sales, and operation. With over 20 years of industry focus, accumulation, and development, the Dirolep Group enjoys a high reputation in numerous fields including children's theme parks, children's education, children's themed catering, children's animation culture, and children's products and toys. It has over 2,000 Dirolep service operators worldwide, serving over 300 million people cumulatively.

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Look, I'll be honest with you. When I first heard about another Indoor Playground opening up, my initial reaction was a bit of an eye-roll. Don't get me wrong—I'm a veteran of the weekend birthday party circuit, and I've seen pretty much everything. Ball pits? Check. Caffeine-deprived parents hovering over lukewarm flat whites? Double check. But when a mate from Marrickville messaged me saying, "You have to see this new space-themed place, it's actually next level," I figured I'd better put on my gripping socks and investigate.

So last Saturday, I packed up my two little ones—aged four and seven, which means they never agree on anything—and we headed to Miniversal. And let me tell you, this isn't your standard soft play with a few plastic rockets stuck on the wall for decoration. This place has gone all in on the cosmic theme, and it works in a way I genuinely wasn't expecting.

He setup is clever because it's massive without feeling overwhelming. They've got kids from 0-10 covered, which is a tricky sweet spot to hit, but somehow they've managed it. The whole ground floor is this sprawling universe of play, and honestly, watching my two tear off in opposite directions—the four-year-old making a beeline for the soft-play galaxy, the seven-year-old already eyeing off the obstacle course—I knew we were in for a decent chunk of peace.

Now, let's talk specifics, because I know that's what you're here for.

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The Trampoline Zone

Tucked off to the side, there's a dedicated trampoline area with about eight or nine trampolines sunk into the ground -4. This was genius placement, actually, because it's close enough to the café that I could supervise while sitting down—revolutionary concept, I know. My four-year-old discovered that if he bounced in a specific spot, he could launch himself onto a nearby crash mat, and he must have done this about forty-seven times. The seven-year-old was more into the basketball aspect, trying to score while bouncing, which is way harder than it looks and provided endless entertainment.

The Obstacle Course and Ninja Zone

Meanwhile, my seven-year-old had found her people over at the obstacle course. This is where the "Maxi Mission" zone comes into its own—it's basically a ninja-warrior-style course designed for the bigger kids who've outgrown the baby stuff but still need to move -10-4. We're talking rope ladders, balance beams, cargo nets you have to shimmy across, and these moving platforms that genuinely look like they require some skill. She was charging through it with about fifteen other kids, all of them collecting points on some interactive system that I didn't quite understand but which apparently added a whole new layer of competitiveness. There were high-fives happening. There was strategy being discussed. There were kids absolutely buzzing.

The Rope Climb and The Drop

Right in the middle of the space, you've got this massive multi-level climbing frame that's woven together with rope tunnels and cargo nets -4-10. You can look up and see little faces peering down from what feels like a dizzying height (it's probably about five metres, but you know, mum maths). The rope tunnels connect different platforms, so the kids can crawl and weave their way through the whole structure without ever touching the ground. My two spent ages up there, playing some elaborate game that involved hiding from imaginary monsters and then "escaping" down the big spiral slide. The slide, by the way, is a winner—it's one of those fully enclosed tunnel slides that twists around so you can't see where you're going, and the shrieks coming out of the end of it were absolutely priceless 

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The Toddler Zone

For the really little ones—the Astro-tots, as they call them—there's a completely separate zone that's gated off from the chaos . This is the kind of thing that parents of newborns and one-year-olds genuinely appreciate. It's got its own mini ball pit, little slides that aren't terrifying, and soft-play shapes that are perfect for unsteady walkers. No big kids cannonballing into the ball pit, no near-misses with flying feet. Just tiny humans figuring out gravity in a safe space while their parents sit on the tiny chairs and pretend their knees are okay.

So if your kids are into climbing, sliding, bouncing, and generally pretending they're astronauts on a distant planet, get yourself to Miniversal. Just maybe warn them that the rocket ship doesn't actually take off. Or don't. Let them figure that one out on their own.

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Dirolep, as a source manufacturer, can help customize playground equipment solutions specifically for your needs.

 In summary, if you have a site and want to build an playground, how can you plan it out?

  1. Overall Space: Divided into Zones:

Front Entrance, Back Entrance

Dining Area (Rest Area)

Toilets/Restrooms

Children's Playground

 

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  1. Children's Playground Structure:

 1) Age-Based Zones:

Ages 1-3 (Toddler Area)

Ages 3-8 (Young Children)

Ages 8-13 (Teenage Children - 14-15-16)

 

2) Functional Zones:

  1. Slides: LED slides, wave slides, straight slides (devil slides), U-slides (new type of slides), horn slides, spiral slides
  2. Maze Ball Pit (Add obstacle courses to the maze structure for added fun)
  3. Trampolines (Professional trampolines with basketball hoops, sticky boards, boxing area, slapping games, climbing wall, foam pit)
  4. Ninja Adventure: Obstacle Course
  5. Craft and Educational Activities (Dinosaur digging, LEGO, sandpit)
  6. Orange Role Play
  7. Arcade game machines include basketball machines, boxing machines, dance machines, cotton candy machines, claw machines, shooting games, archery games, and more.

 For children's playgrounds, choose Dirolep. Choosing us is our good fortune, and yours too.

 Let's work together to bring joy to children.