
I thought indoor playgrounds were closed without exception. Am I wrong?
I received a flyer for the opening of a new indoor trampoline park in the area planned this week.
Now I read [an article](https://www.hln.be/sint-niklaas/1-500-vierkante-meter-aan-springplezier-trampolinepark-b-bounce-opent-zaterdag-de-deuren~aa1a5d91/) in the news that the opening is still happening. Only the section for the little ones will be closed.
Or is there are difference when it comes to little kids (playing) and older kids, teens and adults (sports)? Seems a bit odd that way.
4 comments
As long as “no event is organised” and the booking is “officially” for a sports session with a coach nearby, it can go through the loophole.
For instance the Kojump webpage has this disclaimer.
Less than 6yo is a bit early anyway for bigger trampolines, their area looks too much like a playground.
Similarly escape games and arcades are not in the scope
They are closed, yes.
The bar they have, isn’t because horeca can stay open. They probably say the trampoline park counts as sports’ section as “rebound tumbling” (trampolining) is an Olympic sport.
I’ve never been in a trampoline park, but if I ever go to one and [this song](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XhzpxjuwZy0) is not being played full blast, I’ll be dissapointed
legal or not, the smart thing is to stay away.