Équipements récréatifs Catalogue - Berliner Jeu de câbles | Page 159

Univers Joe Brown Collection

Joseph Brown was born in 1909 in Philadelphia and was a son of Russian immigrants . He studied physical education at Temple University in Philadelphia . Shortly before he was to graduate , he left university and became a professional boxer . Following an injury , Joe discovered he had a passion for sculpture and devoted more and more time to the arts . In 1931 , Joe Brown returned to Temple University and completed his studies . Having recognized that movement through sport and play is important for the development of young people , Joe Brown turned his attention to play equipment for the first time in 1950 and presented examples of his works to the general public at the National Recreational Congress in St . Louis in 1954 . He developed what he termed play communities , which drew attention both for their sculptural character and their play function . Joe Brown is also regarded as a pioneer of modern play equipment culture , having been one of the very first to define play as preparation for the responsibilities of adulthood . In 1959 , Joe Brown published a book called Creative Playgrounds and Recreation Centers containing the designs of his first spatial rope play equipment . He derived his play concept for rope play equipment from a classic boxing ring . Ultimately , Joe Brown became an instructor in art and taught sculpture until his retirement in 1977 . Joseph Brown passed away in 1985 in Philadelphia .
In Germany , it was Conrad Lehmann who further pursued the idea of rope play equipment . Then in the early 1970s , these designs were developed to the mass production stage using the technical expertise of the Berliner Seilfabrik . As an acknowledgement of and homage to the pioneer of rope playing units , the Berliner Seilfabrik revealed a new product line in the autumn of 2014 – the Joe Brown Collection consisting of the worldwide first rope play units with an outer structure made of wood . In 2021 , the series was expanded and the Cube was given a big , iron brother – the Cubiron .
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The Globe The Cube L
Cubiron M
Berliner Univers Joe Brown Collection 153