| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Product Type | Modular outdoor safety surface tile / thermoplastic rubber sheet |
| Target Use Context | Kindergarten outdoor activity space; nursery school use |
| Dimensions | 305 × 305 × 13 mm |
| Material | Thermoplastic polymer rubber (TPR / TPE) |
| Surface Texture | Gem-textured surface |
| Drainage System — Primary | Triangular row drainage holes |
| Drainage System — Secondary | Auxiliary drainage grooves |
| Thermal Expansion Design | Patchwork design for thermal expansion and contraction |
| Bottom Structure | Cylindrical ring bottom |
| Support Structure | Cross ribs / support feet |
| Fall Protection | Safer fall protection for children |
| Anti-Slip Performance | Anti-slip; non-slip under wet conditions |
| Tensile Strength | Excellent tensile strength and toughness |
| Tear / Abrasion Resistance | Superior tear resistance and abrasion resistance |
| Compression Resistance | Good elasticity and resistance to compression deformation |
| Resilience | Excellent resilience |
| Operating Temperature | -40°C to 100°C |
| Low Temperature Performance | Confirmed |
| Weather Resistance | Weather-resistant and colorfast |
| Recyclability | 100% recyclable; environmentally friendly |
Q1: What fall protection performance does this tile provide for children, and how is it verified?
The tile is designated for safer fall protection for children in kindergarten and nursery school outdoor activity spaces, and its structural fall attenuation mechanism operates through two elements: the cylindrical ring bottom, which deforms elastically under the dynamic load of a falling child, and the 13mm TPR material body, which provides cushioning through bulk elastic compression. A specific critical fall height (CFH) value or impact attenuation percentage has not been confirmed in the available product specification; this is a critical data gap for buyers procuring for early-childhood facilities in jurisdictions where outdoor play surfaces are subject to mandatory safety standards such as EN 1177 or equivalent. Buyers should request the applicable test report — [Insert Certification / Critical Fall Height Rating if Available] — from the supplier before finalizing specification, and confirm that the measured CFH covers the installation height of any adjacent play equipment. Procurement without a verified CFH value may expose the facility operator to liability in the event of a fall injury.
Q2: How does the gem-textured surface maintain anti-slip performance for children in wet outdoor conditions?
The gem-textured surface pattern creates a faceted, multi-planar contact geometry across the tile face — unlike a single-direction ridge or hexagonal repeat, the gem facets present grip-active relief to foot contact from multiple approach angles. This is particularly relevant for young children whose foot placement during running and play is less consistent than adult athletic movement, meaning the surface must provide grip regardless of the angle and direction of foot strike. The anti-slip performance mechanism is geometric and structural rather than coating-dependent, so it does not degrade through normal weathering, UV exposure, or cleaning cycles over the tile's service period. Buyers requiring documented wet-condition slip resistance data for tender submissions should request the applicable anti-slip test result — [Insert Certification / Test Rating if Available] — from the supplier.
Q3: How do the triangular row drainage holes and auxiliary drainage grooves work together to evacuate fluid from the play surface?
The drainage architecture in this tile uses two complementary mechanisms operating at different surface scales. The auxiliary drainage grooves on the tile face act as surface-level collection channels that direct standing water from across the tile surface toward the triangular row drainage holes. The triangular drainage holes then pass that water vertically through the 13mm tile body to the substrate layer below. This two-tier system — surface runoff direction followed by vertical through-hole evacuation — allows the tile face to clear water faster than a through-hole-only or groove-only design, reducing the window of time during and after rainfall when the surface presents a slip hazard to children. Adequate sub-tile drainage depends on the permeability or drainage gradient of the underlying substrate; buyers should confirm that the base layer (typically concrete or compacted aggregate) is specified to receive and disperse the drained water volume for their expected rainfall intensity.
Q4: How does the patchwork design manage thermal expansion and contraction, and why does this matter for kindergarten outdoor installations?
Thermoplastic rubber tiles expand and contract in response to ambient temperature change; on outdoor kindergarten play areas — which are typically large, fully exposed to direct sun, and installed without overhead shade structures — the daily and seasonal temperature cycling can be substantial, particularly in climates with cold winters and hot summers. Without accommodation for this movement, rigid-perimeter interlocking tiles on large installed areas can buckle, develop raised joints, or experience connection separation as cumulative thermal displacement builds up across the tile array. The patchwork design addresses this by incorporating a joint geometry that allows each tile to move slightly relative to its neighbors within a controlled dimensional tolerance, absorbing expansion and contraction forces at the joint level rather than transmitting them as stress through the tile body. The -40°C to 100°C confirmed operating range means the material and connection geometry have been specified to function across the full thermal envelope relevant to outdoor early-childhood facility deployments in most geographic markets.