Sunday,
November 11, 2007
Lake Shore
Baptist parents, teachers
built playground from the ground up
By Terri Jo Ryan
Tribune-Herald staff writer

These prekindergarteners got a
preview Friday of the playground
scheduled to open this week at the
Lake Shore Baptist Church Children's
Center. Pictured are (from left)
Haley Plaa, Hazel Martinez, Matthew
Wessel, Libby Bastow, Zachery Wolfe
and Riley Boldt. (Ken Sury photo)
They say it takes a village to raise
a child, but it takes almost that
many to erect a children’s center
playground.

Bill Burt, Jim Fau and Bill
Bellinger pour concrete for
the sunshades. (Lake Shore
Baptist Church photo)

Judy Prather puts together a
picnic table for a new
playground at Lake Shore
Baptist Church Children's
Center. (Lake Shore Baptist
Church photo) |
For two sunny fall days last
month, members of Lake Shore
Baptist Church joined with
the parents and teachers of
its children’s center to dig
holes, hammer pilings, mix
cement and shovel rocks,
sand, dirt and wood fiber.
With volunteers from the
Baylor Transfer Council and
the Freeman Center, they
also struggled with
installing huge sunshade
frames and helping to erect
climbing and sliding
structures.
The Rev. Dorisanne Cooper
said the work crews had no
idea “what an incredible
community building
experience it would be” when
starting the process more
than three years ago.
Faith Kopplin, chairwoman of
the playground committee,
said church members had long
planned to update the
playground for the church’s
children’s center to make it
safer.
“We dreamed of transforming
the play area next to the
church into a place that
welcomes children and
provides for their physical,
emotional and spiritual
needs,” Kopplin said. The
new playground would
encourage fitness as well as
enjoyment of the green
spaces surrounding the
church.
Some scoffed because the
hurdles were many: a
deteriorating wooden fence
needed replacement, the
concrete support walls
needed to be reinforced and
the eroding hillside graded,
she said. Modern playground
equipment is expensive, and
some questioned the
expenditure. |
But in the space of eight weeks, not
only did church members vote to
proceed with plans for the playscape,
they actually raised the funds to do
so, Kopplin said.
Committee member Donovan McNeil said
even folks from the surrounding
neighborhood pitched into the
project, helping to unload an
18-wheeler of supplies and working
under the guidance of three on-site
consultants from Grounds For Play
Inc., a Dallas-area firm that
specializes in such projects.
Lake Shore Baptist re-affirmed its
commitment to the children’s center
last year as a mission of the
church, Cooper said. The vote of
confidence included pay raises for
teachers as well as a commitment to
continue investing in providing
quality child care and development
opportunities for families from all
different backgrounds in Waco.
The playground project is but one
tangible sign of the church’s
commitment, Cooper said.
Since construction, she added, her
flock continues to tell her how much
they enjoyed the time spent together
and letting the conversation flow
over the hours.
“People got to know some they hadn’t
really spent time with before, and
reacquainted themselves with
others,” she added.
Work didn’t slow for two days,
except for a special outdoor worship
service on Sunday morning. “We all
brought lawn chairs and worshipped
in the midst of creation, next to
the work we were doing,” the pastor
said.
Since that weekend, concrete has
been poured for tricycle paths,
sunshades have been put up over the
three main structures and there are
plans for shrubs to attract
butterflies along with a garden
planted by and tended to by the
children, McNeil said.
The work is nearly complete, with
hopes that the playground will be
completely free of remaining
material and stray nails by Monday
so the children can begin enjoying
it.
The playground is intended as a sign
to the neighborhood and the Waco
community as a whole of the church’s
commitment to all aspects of
children’s health.
“Inside these doors is a place which
welcomes and nurtures young children
and their families with God’s kind
of love,” Cooper added. “Now the
outside shows that again, too.”
tjryan@wacotrib.com
Reproduced
with permission of
the
Waco
Tribune-Herald, Copyright 2007