Vancouver closes roller slide at Yaletown playground, citing noise complaints - Action News
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British Columbia

Vancouver closes roller slide at Yaletown playground, citing noise complaints

The Vancouver Park Board shut down a roller slide in a downtown playground after it received noise complaints from residents.

Noise came from people misusing slide by running up instead of sliding down, park board says

A sign says
A sign on a fence blocking off part of Vancouver's sqlxenm ts'exwts'xwi7 Park (Rainbow Park) in the Yaletown neighbourhood is seen on Monday. The city has closed the slide, citing noise complaints from residents. (Ali Pitargue/CBC)

The racket of the rolling slide in a Yaletown neighbourhood playgroundis causing some residents to file noise complaints, according to the Vancouver Park Board.

As a result of what it described asa misuse of equipment, the city has dismantled the slide, which has rollers on which children descend, andfenced it off until it could bereplaced. The rest of the playground's facilities remain open.

Steel fencing now surrounds the space where the roller slide had been atsqlxenm ts'exwts'axwi7 park, also known asRainbow Park in downtown Vancouver.

A roller slide has metal cylinders similar to a baggage conveyor at an airport,but on a downwardincline.

The city said they took the slidedown after residents complained about the steely noise it was creating.

A sign says
A sign in Vancouver's sqlxenm ts'exwts'xwi7 Park (Rainbow Park) in the Yaletown neighbourhood. The Park Board did not provide a timeline for the slide's replacement or re-opening. (Justin McElroy/CBC)

Ian Stewart, a spokesperson for the Vancouver Park Board, said the closure was necessary because somepeople were going up the slide, instead of sliding down as intended.

"They run up, they're actually punching those rollersthrough the slide and dislodging them and as they break and kind of get misaligned it actually creates quite a lot of noise," Stewart said.

He addedthe complaints claimed the clangs were imposing, even in a downtown urban area. The park board said the replacement will take sound and accessibility into account.

"[The closure of the slide] is not fair," said Mohammed, who was passing by the park. "I work just around here and it's not that noisy."

Lynn Tai, who lives nearby and has taken her child to play in the park, saidthe slide can get noisy and that it also has other problems.

"Sometimes your clothes get stuck inside [the slide], so it's probably a good decision to take it down," she said.

News of the slide's dismantling garnered strong reactions on Twitter,with many questioning how its racket comparedto other urban noisesin downtown Vancouver.

The park board did not give a timeline for when the slide will be replaced.

With files from Ali Pitargue and David P. Ball