Milwaukee’s first fully universal playground is taking shape, and it comes with a dragon. The latest concept for Stella’s Playground, revealed over the weekend, shows a fantasy-style playscape designed so kids of all abilities can roll, run, and roam together. The volunteer-driven project honors 9-year-old cancer survivor Stella Schneider and leans heavily on ramps and smooth, continuous paths so wheelchairs, walkers, and strollers can travel side by side. Organizers are aiming to raise $2 million, with hopes of breaking ground in summer 2026, and are actively asking residents to weigh in on the plans.
The newest renderings, shared on the project’s Facebook page, spotlight slides, swings, ramps, and wide, flat surfaces meant to work with mobility devices, according to CBS58. The outlet notes that organizers are pushing for community feedback and have circulated links where neighbors can view the full concept and donate.
According to the project’s press release, the playground will sit on the north end of Kilbourn Reservoir Park, along East Meinecke Avenue between North Booth and North Bremen. That section of the park was donated for the playground by Savage, and the city has committed a lead gift of $200,000, per Stella’s Playground. “This new accessible playground represents an important milestone for Milwaukee. It ensures that children of all abilities have a place to play, connect, and feel included,” Mayor Cavalier Johnson said in the release.
Design and community input
Project leaders say the design has been shaped from the ground up by neighbors. Volunteers collected drawings and ideas from local kids and hosted community events to fine-tune what the space should look and feel like, an outreach push highlighted in local coverage from TMJ4. The resulting concept leans on natural and musical play areas, adaptive sports zones and clear, low-barrier routes so children with sensory or mobility differences can play together without constantly having to navigate around obstacles…