Skaters asked to come up with closing event for Central Park skatepark
SKATEBOARDERS, skaters and stunt bike riders are being invited to help organise a party to mark the end of an era for the Central Park Skatepark.
The existing skateboard park will close at the end of the year to make way for the Life Centre, Plymouth's biggest ever investment in sport and leisure facilities.
Plymouth City Council has promised to build a new skateboard park and has ring-fenced £200,000 funding to make sure it happens.
But it wants skaters to come up with ideas for the final closing party before that.
Sessions are being held in the training room at Central Park's swimming pool between 4.30pm and 6pm every Tuesday to discuss ideas for the closing event – as well as future ideas for the park. The sessions start next Tuesday, September 15.
A council spokesman said that ideas being floated for the future include creating an online archive where the park users can upload photos, video clips and messages about their skating days.
Cabinet member for healthy communities and leisure, Cllr Glenn Jordan, said: "We appreciate that keen skaters will be without a skate park for a while, but this is an opportunity to celebrate the existing park and start thinking about how we can develop a replacement which is bigger and better than the existing one.
"We are now looking at funding opportunities to see if we can raise enough money to meet the skaters' aspirations for one of the best parks in the country.
"It is a chance for them to really make their mark on the sport in the city by helping to plan the new one."
Consultation on where in the park the new facility will go will take place in the autumn and the site chosen will eventually be included in the masterplan for Central Park, which is part of the park's area action plan, said the council.
Once the location has been agreed, a designer will be appointed to consult with the young people on the design of the park.
Nick Marker, who runs the Prime Deluxe Skateboard Shop in Ebrington Street, said: "We want to get as many people involved in planning the new skate park as well as plan a send-off for the old park that skaters won't forget in a hurry."
There are alternative ramps for skaters to use while their park is out of action. They are in Plympton – one at Chaddlewood and one at Peacock Meadow.
Plymouth City Council's Youth Service also has a mobile ramp set which it hopes to install for skaters. A council spokesman said that more details will be available at a later date.











30 Comments
View all
by mike, higher compton
Friday, October 16 2009, 10:21PM
“realisticaly 5k isnt going to do much for a leaving party give the money to prime . also instead of a concrete park buy wooden ramps like flower pot in exeter i imagine there cheaper and wont take as long to put up .”
by Liam Holloway, Plymouth
Monday, October 05 2009, 9:30AM
“Ah well, nothing we can do will chance the council's mind, i just hope they have the heart to just listen to us ... Skating is'nt just for little kids, infact the younger people who are out doing their thing is what people see the most, the real skate scene goes unheard of ... if the council are going to be stubborn then im sure we'll have to put that newly designed uni, them lovely new rails on the hoe and them marble ledges by the market at the bottom of town in to use wont we...”
by Liam Holloway, Plymouth
Monday, October 05 2009, 9:18AM
“What the hell do they think they're doing !
Plymouth city council know nothing about the skate industry, skateparks or building skateparks for that matter ! They need to get off their high horse and listen to what people want for a change, especially this ! 5000 pounds ! that money will open Prime skatepark which im sure is what everyone in plymouth will prefer to skate anyway, What the markers and there team of people have got down there is unreal, There all so freindly, they acctually know how to build ramps so i know what i'd rather skate, but mainly, they've been invovled in the industry for longer than i've been alive. Surely that alone should tell the council to step off the mark, sort it out and listen...”
by dave mirra, New york
Sunday, September 20 2009, 9:46PM
“i agree with tony, oh its costing 20,000 just to dig the old one out, which is being taken out of the skate park fund”
by Danny Ayres, plymouth
Friday, September 18 2009, 10:47PM
“Same shiz different day, i was on the commitee to get the first park built and it was a joke back then. Skating for 24 years now on and off, Please do the right thing PCC. Listen to the youth for once, or at least listen to the ones (PRIME_ ex FLATSPOT) to guide you before you make another error.”