Feeling some childhood nostalgia? Take a step inside an adult fun house - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 27, 2024, 01:41 AM | Calgary | -7.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Feeling some childhood nostalgia? Take a step inside an adult fun house

A pop-up adult fun house will run from August until Halloween in a converted, family-run Kensington grocery store.

Old Kensington grocery store converts into pop-up multi-sensory adult playground

An adult fun house is coming to Toronto's Kensington Market from August to the end of October. (Fairland Funhouse )

First it was colouring books, then escape rooms now there's another way you can join the growing trendtowardgetting in touch with your inner kid:an adult-oriented fun house.

A1950s family-run grocery store in Toronto's KensingtonMarket is beingconverted into a multi-sensory adventure-themed space, running this August through to Halloween.

Described as a "choose-your-own-adventure playground,"FairlandFunhouseis beingdesigned as a two-storey hotel, locatedat 241 Augusta Ave.nearNassau Street.

Visitors will check in through thelobby and take a tunnel to an art maze in the basement. People can then wander through six rooms, each dreamed up by a different team of visual and musical artists.

Organizers are converting an old family-run grocery store to use as the space for their fun house. (Talia Ricci/CBC News )

"We're all about art that you can be in," said Jonah Brotman, co-founder of Mondo Forma, the collective organizing theevent in partnership with Universal Music Canada.

"To us, creating a world like that, something that takes people out of their daily life into something fun and exciting, is something they'll definitely remember and something Toronto needs more of."

Each room is inspired by a collaboration between a musicianand a visual artist, includingToronto rapper Jazz Cartier, Canadian singer/songwriter Lights and watercolour painter Paul Jackson.

Tickets go on sale Tuesday.

Rooms to incorporate augmented reality

Brotman saystheproject is both an ode to an adored mom-and-popKensington supermarket, anda chance for visitors to touch and play in "trippy"physical and digital spaces.

"How can you say no to a colourful rainbow explosion?" he said.

'Were really excited to make art and music come to life in a new way and a new space,' said Jonah Brotman, one of the creators of Fairland Funhouse. (Fairland Funhouse)

From a jungle with a 12-foot elephant to a crystal cave, the themes of each room will include their own interactive elements.

Fariland Funhouse will also incorporate augmented reality through an app visitors can download. Guests will be able to use theapp by holding their phone upto different objects throughout the space to see a digital piece of art animate overtop of the analog art.

"You're walking into the art and you're able to become part of the art, interact with the art in ways that you couldn't have before," said Mariel Pauline, one of the artists constructing the fun house.

The room designed by rapper Jazz Cartier and artist Casey Watson will feel like a 'lush tropical jungle, alive with sound, oversized plants and animals.' (Fariland Funhouse)

Pauline is working on building the room designed by Paul Jackson, the painter,and musician Bad Child.

"It will feel like you're walking into this black hole; a slightly sinister, but playfully sinister environment," she said.

Adult activities benefit mental health, therapist says

The fun house is part ofgrowing trend among adults to find ways to "escape," psychotherapist Marco Fiorante says.

"There's a market open for it;people are picking up on it," Fiorante said. "I believe that today there's so many ways that we are doing for others, always moving, moving, moving. People are burning out."

Psychotherapist Marco Fiorante says adult-themed venues like Fairland Funhouse are 'free spaces' that promote both play and self-discovery. (Keith Whelan/CBC News)

Fiorantesays he recommends new activities like these to his clients as a catalyst for positive mental health. He also notesthat those who frequently seek outlets like these possibly missed these experiences in their childhood.

"I wonder who are the people who are seeking this out. What type of people?" Fiorante said. "Mazes and all the different things that can open something up within us, I think can be missed in childhood."

With files from Talia Ricci