Blow Up Party =link= -

Within ten minutes, the entire setup was folded, rolled, and strapped into the van. Javier used a compression strap system, reducing the 150-pound castle to a 4-foot-tall stack. "That’s the real magic," Rosa said. "From a semi-truck’s worth of volume to a coffee table. Then back again."

By 7:00 AM, Rosa and her son, Javier, loaded a van for a seventh birthday party in the suburbs. The order was modest: a 10x10 bounce house, a small slide, and a balloon arch. As they drove, Rosa explained the industry’s quiet evolution. "Fifteen years ago, these were all PVC. Now we use vinyl and nylon blends. Lighter, stronger, but still not biodegradable. A single castle takes about 500 years to break down in a landfill. That’s why we repair, not replace." blow up party

While kids bounced, Rosa shared the hidden history. The modern bounce house, she explained, was invented in 1959 by John Scurlock in Shreveport, Louisiana. He was experimenting with inflatable covers for tennis courts and noticed his employees enjoyed jumping on the air-filled cushions. The first commercial unit was simply called "The Space Walk." By the 1980s, the industry boomed, and by 2019, the global market was worth over $4 billion. Within ten minutes, the entire setup was folded,