The Service Tree lists all services in "branched" groups, starting with the very general and moving to the very specific. Click on the name of any group name to see the sub-groups available within it. Click on a service code to see its details and the providers who offer that service.
Recreational Facilities
Programs that develop, maintain and make available to the public, facilities that are set aside and equipped for vacationing individuals and families who are camping. Also included are private camp sites that are available for rental to groups. Camp sites are usually located in the mountains, forests, deserts or other recreational areas and vary greatly in the amenities that are available which may include water, showers, toilets, electrical hookups, picnic areas, firepits and/or a variety of indoor and outdoor recreational facilities.
Programs that develop, maintain and make available to the public, courses that are laid out for the game of golf with a series of nine or 18 holes each including a tee, a fairway, a green and often one or more natural or artificial hazards.
Programs that develop, maintain and make available to the public, outdoor recreational areas, often located on school grounds or in community parks, which are equipped with sandboxes, swings, jungle gyms, rings, slides, playing fields, courts and other recreational apparatus for children.
Centers, often operated by the local community department of parks and recreation, that offer, at a single location, a variety of recreational facilities such as athletic fields and courts, a gymnasium, a swimming pool and locker facilities. Recreation centers usually offer an organized program of activities for community residents of all ages and provide all necessary equipment.
Local parks or other facilities that develop and maintain interactive aquatic play areas for children where water may shoot from fountains, jets, falls, hoses, pull spouts, water guns or through water curtains and then drain away before it can accumulate. Spray grounds are constructed with water features that children can run through, jump into or just sit and enjoy as a way of cooling off during the summertime heat. Some parks have multiple play areas for different age groups, e.g., misting and low spray play areas for toddlers and preschool-age children and rain shower, cascades and other, more high-powered water features for older children. Spray grounds may be an alternative to a community pool in some areas or an added feature of a park's pool area in others.
Programs that develop, maintain and make available to the public, swimming pools which may be equipped with diving boards of various heights, slides and other equipment.