Posted on 04/06/2015 5:10:21 PM PDT by Cowman
Jeremy Trentelmans cardboard fort for his kids came with windows, trap doors and a green slide. Then the city of Ogden, Utah, gave him 15 days to take it down.
With the help of their kids Max, 3, and Story, 2, Trentelman and his wife, Dee, cut and taped the cardboard to build two towers, trap doors, tunnels, and a slide. They built the whole thing last week with the help of their friend, Byron Owens, and his two kids Satoria and Oliver in Ogden, Utah. His friends daughter also wrote a sign on the door of the fort reading, Everyone can come in. We all had a blast putting it together and weve had tons of fun with it since, Trentelman told BuzzFeed News. Trentelman has few choices. He can pay $25 to dispute the citation, or pay the $125 fee if the fort doesnt come down within 15 days. That means, Trentelman said, hes got 14 days to milk the fort for all its worth. According to the letter, the fort violated the citys code prohibiting, waste materials or junk on premises. Its an awesome fort, he told BuzzFeed News. It was just kind of silly and ridiculous. He was angry at first, he said, and even pictured himself going to the city council meeting. Hed walk up to the podium and fight his cause if he had to. But he doesnt want to turn what has been the center of joy and happiness for his kids into something negative.
The truth is the fort has seen a couple of days of rain, the elements are beating down on the cardboard and he would have probably taken it down, had it not been for the citys notice. BuzzFeed News could not reach Ogden city officials Saturday because of the weekend. Now, Trentelman wants it to last, and he wants other kids to be able to enjoy it.
His kids love the fort, he explains. For him, it was a way to spark their imagination and getting them excited about playing outdoors and away from the electronics of the home. As soon as we get home from the sitter, my son is like, Can we play in the fort? he said. It was super cheap to build, and completely awesome.
Trentelman now plans to keep the fort until day 14. Hes collecting cardboard to reinforce it, and to fix worn down pieces. If a friend or neighbor wants to borrow it and have their kids play with it in their yard, Trentelman said hes more than happy to make it happen. He and his kids can draw dragons and unicorns on the sides, and pass it on to another family as a traveling art project. It be great if it continues to live in another home, he said. Just because of the stupidity of the situation. As word spread of the citys notice, some members of the community have aired support for Trentelman and the fort. One has reached out to the rest of Ogden, and asked residents to build their own forts in their front yards.
Several of the houses we have looked at have massive front yards and a tiny strip for a backyard.
And if it was built in a vacant lot it would be every bit as much of an eyesore.
People need to chill. It is made out of cardboard and will vanish after a good spring storm.
In the mean time the neighborhood gets to see something that is rare and lovely anymore. Children playing outside.
It always makes me smile to see that.
Geez....after it rains or snows once, it will be over. So let’s make a big deal about it now. “I’m from the gov’t and I’m here to help you.”
I have fond memories of that activity :). Good times.
Was is the operative word. The fools of Ogden don’t understand rain and that it is short lived? Probably some A-hole neighbor.
They don’t have a back yard?
LOL. Good call.
Yeah, I was guilty of that as a kid, too... The box got my attention first, knowing that it would disappear almost immediately, but the toy inside would stick around.
I always wanted to get one of those!
He can’t just reassemble it in the back yard? I mean, boo on the government hack for spoiling children’s fun, but since they did, I would just reassemble it in the back yard.
Beyond that, article says rain is deteriorating the cardboard fort anyway.
“Perhaps not. But I have a personal policy that if Im going to reply to an article with outrage, I read the article first.”
Blasphemer! Know you not the code of the Freeper is “REPLY FIRST”?
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