Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Southbank




Southbank is London's OG skatespot.

Located beneath the Queen Elizabeth Hall, Southbank has sheltered British skateboarding since the early 70's thanks to it's assortment of banks, stairs, walls and ledges. In actual fact, the Southbank is the common name given to the area of Thames riverside that houses various concert and art buildings, but today the public space is equally known for its skateboarding cultists.

Unless you live in London and skate Southbank regularly, there's a fair chance you don't like the place. It has all the characteristics of an inner city skatespot: It's dirty, dark, dodgy and doesn't do anyone any favours. Homeless people lived in cardboard boxes next to the main banks, and on several occasions local rudeboys would pass through to rob skaters and occasionally serve out a beating. The curators upstairs tried during the early 90's to expel skateboarding from the premises by erecting bars around the banks, ruining run up areas, cobbling kickers, switching off the lights, hiring over-zealous security guards and even boarding up 2/3 of the venue for a 'Blind experience' exhibition. Needless to say, the skaters stuck it out and adapted their approach to the spot. Scuffles were had and the exhibit got trashed.

Over the last few years, with skateboarding's notoriety gaining epic proportions within social circles, skateboarding has been embraced by authorities and skateable structures adorn the underpass despite a major part of the area being closed off for building works. The local scene is thriving again even if the future of Southbank remains uncertain.

My fondest memories of Southbank were during the darkest years of the early 90's- an era when skateboarders occupied the lowest echalon of the social ladder and couldn't care less. Southbank then was Ben Jobe (pictured c/o Wig Worland) killing it without a sponsor, Winstan Whitter and Big Clive Daley rocking bootleg rap tapes on the stereo, spontaneous sessions over the bar and skating the beam block caked in wax. No websites, artists, pro demos, photo ops or fashionistas in sight.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Wall Street Skateshop


Wall St is Lyon's finest skateshop.

This is Sylvain a.k.a. Barbiche. He runs the place with Ben Gonselin, the owner and founder. Together they support Lyon's massive skate scene and guide it in the right direction. They only hire skaters to help work in the shop, they sponsor locals and a few pros, they organise sessions and barbeques, and they're always down for a skate after a long days graft.

Skater owned shops are the best outlets and beacons for us. You won't find a stronger connection in a shopping mall or online delivery service. Support the skater owned skateshops because they support you!

Monday, February 05, 2007

Dropping in


When you're on top of that quaterpipe, all alone and looking down, there's only one thing left to do- Drop in.

I think everyone eats shit the first time they enter a ramp the proper way i.e. not pumping from the flatbottom. I remember suffering a sweet friction burn on my right knee. Sure enough, I didn't fall again. People can teach you all the techniques in the world, but what it all comes down to is inner confidence.

Once you've done it, you'll be wondering what all the fuss was about.

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Love Park




Love Park, Philadelphia, is in need of some love.

Originally named the John F. Kennedy Plaza, and situated across the road from City hall, Love park brought skateboarding back to the East Coast of America after a long vacation in the Californian sunshine. Ricky Oyola, Stevie Williams, Fred Gall, Matt Reason, Josh Kalis, Brian Wenning, Kevin Taylor and many more are synonymous with one of skateboarding's greatest street spots.

Today, skateboarding is outlawed at Love Park with signs warning $300 fines for any wrong-doers. Today the politicians own Love, but one day skateboarders will take it back for good.