Landscaping for Skateboarding

Skateboarding is growing in popularity and it is far and away the most popular urban sport with a not insignificant industry behind it. Skateboarders are unique in seeing not just a purpose for many urban scapes the majority of the population would loathe, but having a passion for these places also.

In Paris there is a rapidly growing use of roller blades, skateboards and push scooters for commuting purposes. Also there are places in Paris where skaters have become a symbol of the landscape itself the Jardins du Trocadéro is a prime example, where daily skaters gather to show off their skills to the tourists.

The UK has an enviable reputation in the Skateboarding world, generating many stars who remain largely unheard of outside the UK skateboarding fraternity but are almost household names in California and elsewhere. Skateboarding is not a fad, it is here to stay.

There are few other activities which incite so much vitriol, but headlines such as ‘Grandma killed by Skateboard yobs’ have not happened. The occasional annoyed pedestrian is surely a small price to pay for a sport which brings colour, skills and life back into the concrete jungle. A sport which allows youth in some of our most depressed areas to excel and in fact increases the worth of the place itself, rather than with footballers who are shipped off to Cheshire mansions. A sport which sees groups of harmless youths inevitably policing depressed areas simply by their presence.

I don’t have much reason to think about skateboarders in terms of my work. There was once a time when I was asked to write a comment in favour of banning skateboarders as they were a risk to urban tree planting – but it was impossible to justify this, skateboards cannot get close enough to trees to damage them, there is much more of a risk from mobility scooters and pedestrians. In fact planting urban trees would diminish areas to skateboarders.

The sheer hatred of skateboarders has convinced some council’s to liaise directly with the skaters and provide ‘honeypot’ schemes in urban green space, as skateboarding is such a visible youth activity the NIMBY’s who complain about it should be made more aware of what is going on behind their backs and the true problems disenfranchised youth has to deal with, rather than councils simply pandering to such vitriol.   

But as urban regeneration schemes continue to destroy the skateboarders habitat, Landscape Architects are using tricks to deliberately thwart skateboarders, surely this is simply unfair and very shortsighted. And shouldn't we in fact be encouraging more skateboard friendly landscape design into our urban communities to encourage this sport?

Skateboarding VS Architecture: A Study of Public Space and Materiality in Auckland City from SwineTrotters on Vimeo.

http://vimeo.com/31136828

Votes: 0
E-mail me when people leave their comments –

Comments

  • I must confess to be being a skateboarder myself, or was, getting far too old now, but the village has great longboard run in it! ahem.

    I love the idea of skateboarding becoming an accepted mode of transport.

    I often wonder when skateboarders migrate to a piece of street furniture and practice endless tricks and gain pleasure from it what the designer must think - will we actually ever see design that incorporates skating, seating (or another purpose) and aesthetics installed into townscapes?

  • I remember feeling unhappy when my daughter got into a skateboarding group but felt she had to learn from her own 'mistakes'. They absolutely won me over when they got her home late one night and the two older boys walked her right up to our door to apologise and accept responsibility for her being late. As I got to know them I realised the mistake was mine, not my daughter's. They were very protective of each other, and when she started dating one of them their warnings to him were a lot more severe than mine.

    A huge problem for me is the way we see young people and especially in the urban environment. We seem to want to create areas where children and young people are acceptable but segragate them in the wider community. To some extent I think this is why we have such a big problem with young people.

    A much better approach is to look at creating environments where young and old can share spaces with each other and create much more possitive interaction. On our last open day we had some children who were interested in taking part, but were on bikes. Rather than just telling them to go away I told them they were welcome but asked them to take their bikes home first and come back or put their bikes in a certain location where they would not be a nuisance.

    They did take their revenge when it was my time in the stocks, but were well behaved and enjoyed joining in. One concern was that we did a street art project, where they were assigned a pavement stone given chalk and asked to decorate it. Some of the residents thought it would encourage graffitti, but the result were great and there has been no graffitti reported since the event. I am aware of one company that actively promotes this shared space approach, PlayLink. I'm hoping to do one of their walks and talks later this year, when the weather warms up.

  • http://www.playlink.org/

    What a brilliant organisation, thanks for highlighting it George. Bernard Spiegal's articles are very insightful. 

This reply was deleted.

You need to be a member of Landscape Juice Network to add comments!

Join Landscape Juice Network

Open forum activity

Angela Sharp replied to Andrew Bentley's discussion Finding work
"I have worked for 15 years as a gardener and not long after I first started I put ads in parish magazines in three local areas and also Yell. Now I think Yell is a bit outdated these days, and is also very expensive and didn't produce what I…"
1 hour ago
John F replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"Privacy perhaps  or to prevent a pet from escaping through the neighbours garden .
If it's for mobility a handrail would suffice . 
 "
4 hours ago
Jonathan Davidson replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"My first question would be WHY!
Why on earth would someone want a fence down the middle of a narrow shared footpath of steps...... it seriously starts to limit what can and cant be moved up and down the steps in the future what with the exitsting…"
5 hours ago
Stuart @ Eco Garden Maintenance updated their profile
5 hours ago
Billybop replied to robert pryor's discussion Battery hedgcutter advice
"The higher voltage (after a certain point) doesn't necessarily mean a faster stroke rate. For fine conifer and the like I use a Stihl HSA94T (older version of the HSA130T) which is incredibly fast, in fact I can't even cope with it on the highest of…"
7 hours ago
The Wall replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"Personally i think you are opening a can of worms, i would hazard a guess that somewhere in the title deeds you can not put a fence down there as both parties are responsable for the up keep of the steps, if you had asked me to quote i would walk…"
7 hours ago
Will Roberts replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"If the fence has to go on top of the concrete steps I'd put up a continuous post and rail feather edge fence with the posts in holes cut through the concrete. (I hate using metpost supports) You won't need as many post holes as you would using…"
12 hours ago
robert pryor replied to robert pryor's discussion Battery hedgcutter advice
"I’m not sure thats the case with all. As I said the stihl petrol is 4.7 kg minus petrol. A lot of battery models I’ve been looking at come in at under 4kg inc battery, also the run times dont look bad if you’ve a 5AH battery. Anyway as Im now only…"
12 hours ago
Sam Bainbridge replied to Andrew Bentley's discussion Finding work
"Parish magazine and recommendations are the only way if you expect to be fully booked in a.month think again. It takes time and effort you have to be better than the rest to recommendations or cheaper. I'd go cheaper at the start then as you fill up…"
15 hours ago
Ian Harvey replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"What is the width of the steps (side to side)? They don't look very wide, and putting a fence in the middle might make the steps unusable for both parties. You could spend a lot of time and money doing this, only to have your neighbour legally…"
17 hours ago
Peel Projects updated their profile
yesterday
Andrew Bentley and Honey Badger are now friends
PRO
yesterday
Adam Woods replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"ok.. I thought it was along the hedge line... in the middle of the steps i agree, my idea isnt going to work"
yesterday
Ben Huntington replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"The boundary line runs down the centre of these steps so esstentially it will run from the gap between the window/patio door right down the steps to where the bin is on picture 2"
yesterday
Ben Huntington replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"Thanks for your response but we definetly want fencing instead of a hedge"
yesterday
Ben Huntington replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"Does this give you the view you need?"
yesterday
More…

Lawn Water Conserver

A question for those offering lawn treatments. Does anyone use a specific product, separate to their normal treatments, that's specifically used when we have long, dry periods? Can anyone recommend a good product? I imagine it would likely be a…

Read more…
0 Replies
Views: 18