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Cleaning Access Check

Use this before approving a ball pit drawing. Health guidance supports daily cleaning and immediate cleaning of soiled surfaces, so the layout has to make access realistic.

Staff can reach at least one full side of the pit.
Ball removal avoids the main walkway.
Storage exists for lost property and spare balls.
Base inspection works at closing time.
Slide landing leaves room for cleaning.

Access Readiness

10 / 10

Strong access. Keep these details in the 2D/3D drawing and quote notes.

Operational Briefing

Daily cleaning needs practical access, not only a written routine. Soiled areas should be reachable without moving half the playground. Operators also need a place to stage balls during deep cleaning. Visibility matters when toddlers and older children share one zone. Corners collect debris first. Drain locations can change the final layout. Wall openings should not face a busy corridor. Slide exits need extra clearance. Supplier drawings should mark the service side. Photos from the venue make this check more accurate. During final drawing review, ask the supplier to show how staff will remove balls, wipe the base, inspect corners, and reopen the area without blocking parents or the main circulation route. Before approval, the project team should walk through closing-time cleaning, weekend crowd flow, spare-ball storage, and staff sight lines because these operating details decide whether a ball pit stays easy to maintain after opening. Because ball pits can look simple in a sales drawing while becoming difficult to clean after a busy weekend, this score should be checked with the operator, installer, and supplier before the custom foam wall, slide landing, and ball quantity are locked for production.

Ask for cleaning-aware layout