Trishamae:
You have a might interesting design problem there, and I’ll bet we won’t find much coverage for “an adventure facility called aerial walk” in any of the building codes. You will have to weave together bits of codes like the IBC and various fall protection provisions from OSHA, etc. The design of the columns/poles, and the design of the cables and their fittings should not be too difficult, pretty std. design methods exist for this. The tough part will be determining/setting the design loads. How many people can be on each area or piece of equipment at one time, and who is going to police this in operation? Remember, people who like this kind of activity will try almost anything they can get away with, and then want to blame someone else for not keeping them safe when things go wrong. It appears that in some cases one post supports several different pieces of equipment which might interact, multiply the post loading, when they are in use at the same time. Look over the links Bridgebuster and SlideRuleEra offered, and note that a cable stretched from point A to point B, with a 200lb. load hanging off of it (at whatever factor of safety you use) can induce 1000's of pounds of horiz. force at their reaction points. And, these will produce some very large guy wire loads and dead man weights for these guy wires.
That you would think that you could find a single fancy computer program that would solve this problem for you, is probably dreaming, given the infinite plan and elevation variations which might exist, and the vast difference in the structural elements involved. And, that you would try to do this all in one big model sounds crazy to me. It might actrually say something about the fact that you could be in way over your head on this project. You should have a fairly good understanding of how to solve/design each of these separate systems longhand. Then when you get things sized and squared away, use some computer software to refine your designs and check more load conditions. Each activity system is sorta a separate project. I would be inclined to try to provide independent support poles and systems for each different activity area. Then find the worst loads and load condition for that support system and design it. Exactly how you interlace the various activity systems might be another issue.