Within an arch, there is a climbing net. Well.. two climbing nets. And neither are perfectly vertical but are rather offset from each other slightly, creating a little gap.
Looks like the mast and a sail of a sailing ship. If the sail was just an outline of metal with a single foot step at the bottom. Attached to a playground. So really nothing like a mast and a sail of a sailing ship. My bad.
Apparently a squiggle pole and another squiggle pole together make a double squiggle ladder. It's got S-shaped squiggles on two planes. Snakes on (two) planes!
A slide consisting of parallel metal tubes set at an incline with additional metal tubes shaped into ovals above. Or a climbing element consisting of parallel metal tubes set at an incline with additional metal tubes shaped into ovals above.
It's a half circle ladder but the sides keep switching. Or - to put it another way - two vertical poles with half circle arcs as steps and the arcs alternate sides.
A large, standalone net climbing structure with triangular faces and several 'internal' elements including hanging steps and a cargo net. Attaches to a large curved slide via a rope net bridge.
A single pole extends from the ground, dramatically flares into a circular metal base. Above the base, there is rope netting that forms a cylinder with a graceful quarter twist before meeting the circular metal ring that forms the top support. And the entire element rotates along the central pole. Amazing.
A ladder created by two poles that curve from the ground to the platform where the rungs are slight curved and includes curving handrails. There is also a small black belt segment.
Replace the internal organs of a dinosaur with plastic playground steps and this is the result. And also replace the rest of the dinosaur with green plastic molded in the shape of a dinosaur.
A moderate sized, standalone net climbing structure with curving triangular faces and wood 'cladding' the resembles a cabin. There are a few internal climbing elements and a single metal slide.