Two MONA locations

Two locations —one development system

MONA has two locations, and each of them plays its own role in the child's development.

The main center provides structure and daily practice. The farm adds nature, sensory experience, and interaction with animals. Together they create one unified developmental environment.

Main center

Daily sessions, a structured environment, equipped spaces, and systematic work on skills.

Farm

A natural environment, hippotherapy, animals, walks, and sensory experience that make development deeper and more alive.

Main center

Main center

The main center is the base of daily work where the child receives systematic sessions, a clear structure, and an environment for regular skill development.

This is where the key foundations of development are built: movement, attention, independence, and daily living skills through consistent and steady practice.

What the center space looks like

Center infrastructure

two floors and spacious halls
rooms for individual sessions
a separate room for table tennis
equipment storage
a sea-sand zone
outdoor play area
a zone for learning roller skating
training equipment
a separate kitchen
separate showers, toilets, and changing rooms for boys and girls

Main areas of work

motor development
coordination exercises
endurance training
attention development
building independence
daily living skills

The main center is a space for regular and consistent work where development is built on repetition, structure, and professional support.

Farm

Farm — the second developmental environment

The farm is not just a separate location but a space where the child receives a natural, sensory, and emotional environment that cannot be fully recreated in the city.

Here development happens through contact with nature, animals, and open space. This environment helps the child become calmer, more stable, and more confident in interacting with the world.

What the farm looks like

What the territory includes

hippotherapy area
horse riding
mini farm with domestic animals
educational garden
rest area
walking grounds

Why nature matters

contact with animals helps develop emotional stability and trust
open space reduces tension and gives the child more freedom of movement
the sensory experience of nature helps regulate state and attention better
a living environment makes development more natural and engaging
the child gains experience interacting with the world beyond the usual limits of indoor spaces

The farm complements the work of the main center and gives the child the kind of experience that is especially important for sensory, emotional, and social stability.

Final step

Ready to get acquaintedwith the MONA development system?

We will show how both environments work, explain the goals of the program, and answer your questions.