Scale. One box equals 5 m reproduce the scale drawing of a playground so that it has a scale of one box equals 20 m, which drawing shows the new scale.

In order for me to accurately provide you with a visually accurate scale drawing, I would need access to an image or description of the playground you would like to replicate. However, I can explain how to convert the scale from one box equals 5 m to one box equals 20 m in a general sense.

To increase the scale from 1 box equals 5 m to 1 box equals 20 m, you would need to enlarge the dimensions of the playground on the drawing proportionally. This means that every measurement on the original drawing would be multiplied by a factor of 4.

For example, if a certain section on the original drawing measures 3 boxes wide, it would need to be enlarged to a width of 12 boxes in the new scale drawing (3 boxes x 4 = 12 boxes).

Similarly, if a certain section on the original drawing measures 6 boxes long, it would need to be enlarged to a length of 24 boxes in the new scale drawing (6 boxes x 4 = 24 boxes).

By increasing all the measurements on the original drawing by a factor of 4, you would be able to create a new scale drawing where every box represents 20 m instead of 5 m.