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Fresh Blood – Jerry Wilson

Croydon’s Drawing Boards fascinate us here at Crossfire.

The reality of a skateboard company giving it their all from where we all grew up back in the 80’s at the Norwich Union banks and Fairfields was farfetched but now, this generation have it on their doorstep and it’s growing week by week.

It’s not the only reason that this zine gives Drawing Boards support though as heritage alone doesn’t warrant the links, the write up’s, the interviews and the time put in to rep skater owned and paid for operations with little distribution. This skateboard company is run from the heart, on pride and passion and most of all by the skill of the riders who rep it the most.

This week’s Fresh Blood feature welcomes the ever growing steez of one of those riders who lives for the session, Jerry Wilson. Look out for him on your travels.

WHO?

Full Name: Jeremy John Wilson
Age: 19
Sponsors: Drawing Boards, Coping Threads.
Hometown: Down Croydon way.
Skating since: I was a wee nipper.
Favourite tricks: Tre flips, nose bonks and general quirkyness.
Favourite spots/terrain: Fairfield in its hay day.
Inspired by: Skateboarding itself mate.
Hates: Teenage mums.
Loves: My mum.
Can’t live without.. My black hat.
Skate video: A Happy Medium.
Fave sesh: Fairfield with the boyards.
Music to die to: Whatever’s on I guess.
Ultimate aim in life: To be enlightened with my skateboard beneath me.

AD ON JERRY

Young Jerry Wilson is constantly progressing. We skate together a lot, the kid will just be cruising about doing his signature quirky moves and then bang outta nowhere he will start producing tricks I’ve never seen him do before. Either he’s got a secret training basement somewhere or he’s incredibly gifted. I’m going for the latter. Sometimes when we go out filming I will literally tell him to do something and he’s always like ” Aw … urm I’ll try , but probably won’t do it”. Next thing I know BLAM he’s done it with effortless style while I’m fumbling to get the fisheye out my bag.

When Jerry was little bug eyed nipper sponsorship and all that crap was the last thing on his mind, he was just out skating everyday with his band of miniature men come rain or shine. I’m well hyped to have Jerry repping Drawing Boards. He has all the good qualities needed to shine .. He’s talented, humble and got an unmistakable sick style to boot. But I’d rather not tell him to be honest.

I’ve sent you a tiny little taste of what the youth can do, so click the image above for the footy. We are saving the other stuff for his video part so watch this space. Enjoy…

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Features

Spot Check – Collingwood Park Bowl, Sutton.

Photos courtesy of Adam McEvoy

Sutton in Surrey was once quoted on the front page of the daily papers as having ‘the highest youth crime rate in the UK‘ with photos of 8 year old thugs dressed in Nike’s and gold earings. The good news though is that one of Britain’s best loved comic entertainers and Goon Show extraordinaire, Harry Secombe lived there which made it alright.

My family grew up on the St Helier estate, only a mile from Sutton high street but I managed to bump into skateboarding and music at a skate park and it was these 2 pastimes that handed me my escape route at an early age. Looking back though, it was all because of the park. It brought people together and we should be so lucky people care to build them.

Recently, news surfaced that a new bowl had been built in the Sutton area by our good friends at Gravity Skateparks and there’s no doubt that it jogged some good memories.

Collingwood Rec had a concrete BMX jump laid in the late 70’s that lasted for decades. My BMX obsession ended though after a relative came back from Philadelphia with BMX Action Magazine for me and inside beamed Tony Hawk hucking out an indy air at Del Mar. It changed everything, I was more than intrigued. The bike rusted in the shed and skateboarding was it.

Growing up at Collingwood was gnarly in the late 70’s early 80’s. Skinheads used to sniff glue from bags at the steps, looking like they were gonna smash yer face in at any moment and fights were always kicking off. The skinheads were fucking cool though, they had something I wanted, independence. The day I mentioned to my Mum that they hung out there cracking bags and puking everywhere, I was banned for what felt like an age. I was gutted as this was my escape from boredom being 12 yrs and down for anything.

A few years later when we had moved from the area, a vert ramp appeared out of nowhere, constructed and leveled on the concrete there. Matthew Bott’s nosepicks that were witnessed on this tiny, but scary ramp were insane. Once that ramp had been burnt down the local Sutton scene had spread to Croydon’s Fairfields and over to Worcester Park where the Dorchester spine ramp was born. It was like the search for Animal Chin was over for us at the time. He was right here in our own back yard! Everyone skated this ramp, people would travel from afar for a session, pro’s and local bro’s had that set up wired. It’s also a fact that many girls went under that ramp for cover and the sessions were often hilarious. That ramp like all of them back then burnt down too but the memories remain, just ask Simon Evans (artist) , Richard File (U.N.K.L.E), Gorm at Tweaker or skate photographer Richie Hopson if you bump into them skating, it was an amazing couple of years at that spot.

So anyway, here’s the Collingwood Park spot check. This was probably too much information but this park meant a lot looking back so it’s a pleasure to get it out of the system after 8 years of Crossfire. Throughout those years, so many new skateparks have been built in areas all over the UK that really need them. Hopefully the inspiration of this build will help others to get into skating as there’s no doubt that most of us see life in a different way which leads to understanding that working for a living can actually be fun.- Zac

We caught up with Gravity Parks designer and Vans/Creature skater Marc Churchill about the build.

How the hell did you manage to build a bowl in Sutton?!

That’s what I was thinking! Haha! We were contacted by a main contractor who had the job to refurbish the park (Collingwood) and one of the main items on their list of works to be carried out was to provide and new skate facility. So they contacted us to meet on site to discuss what was possible at the location and for the budget.

The local skaters there will be stoked, was there input from them or did you just plough on with it?

I was very pleased to see old Pacer pro Ian Scudds better known as the legendary DAVROS at the meeting, he had made a scaled model of what the user group wanted and gave me a design also.

It’s a small bowl but whippy, is it the smallest build Gravity has done to date?

Yeah it is a small bowl, I wanted to make it a bit deeper and my first design showed that but after closer consultation with Davros we decided to make it the depth it is today. I made the transitions a bit tighter so that it didn’t feel like your classic small ramp, and I feel it keeps your speed better at that size.

Tell our readers what to expect when they get there.

Well when you get there you will find a classic keyhole shaped bowl, 3 feet in the shallow end and 4 feet in the deeper end with a 6 foot extension facing the waterfall. Probably some kids on mountain bikes and a snarling, hairy creature slashing around the place called DAVROS.

What’s coming up next for Gravity?

Things are looking very exciting to be honest! We have quite a few parks coming up, some of which had some very unique features. I am trying to put a lot of street style objects into parks but with an aesthetic look, and after the success with the brick transition and bank at Barnstaple we should be seeing a lot more different textures and strange configurations, so keep your eyes peeled for some more original skate parks from us soon.

Drawing Boards head honcho Adam McEvoy is local to the park and shares his
Top 10 things to know about Collingwood Park Bowl.

1. The workmanship and finish on the bowl is good.
2. It was built by the guys from Gravity who deserve praise for what they are doing for skateboarding in the UK.
3. Don’t go there during there after 4 on a weekday unless your riding a scooter or BMX!
4. The drainage actually works.
5. The bowl is there partly due to the hard work of Davros.
6. It’s fun to pump around for the mature skater and great for beginners to learn in too.
7. Sutton United FC next door was a ground that Vinny Jones played at during his career.
8. The coping is fine.
9. It’s lots of fun.
10. Take broom if you can, it gets pretty dusty in there.

Collingwood Park is based in Sutton, Surrey. Nearest train station is West Sutton and you can easily skate here and the new Tolworth bowl in the same day. Click here for a map.

If you would like to contribute a Spot Check to this site from your area, we welcome your contributions so get in touch here if so and write for the site.

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Fresh Blood: Ali Drummond

Photos courtesy of Ben Hay.
Footage courtesy of Richard Pullinger.

The Harmony have been plugging away in the UK skate scene for a few years and making some amazing inroads too. Their recent DVD River’s Edge is a 13 minute butter bomb aimed at making you stand up and take notice of the new breed of British skateboarder and beyond. You can read a review of that with a swift click here.

As they expand they seem to attract a new wave of ripper and over the next few weeks we will introduce you to 2 of the latest ams to be on the up on the team. The other rider we have picked will remain nameless for now as this Fresh Blood feature focuses on a skater who is making a name for himself down here in the South. Today, we welcome Ali Drummond..

WHO?

Name: Ali Drummond

Age: 20

Sponsors: South, The Harmony, etnies, Analog.

Hometown: Tunbridge Wells.

Skating since: I picked up a board.

Tricks: Good ones.

Favourite spots/terrain: The streets.

Inspired by: Pappalardo + Cardiel + Aung San Suu Kyi.

Hates: Haters.

Loves: Skateboarding.

Can’t live without: Luke Harris.

Skate video: Closure.

Fave sesh: Euro trips with the TW crew are always the best.

Music to die to: Something epic, Gybe?

Ultimate aim in life: To keep traveling to new places and have sick times.

Pas on Ali

Ali is straight up rad, the drum-face killer, obviously, otherwise he wouldn’t be getting one of these Fresh Blood features! So what’s there to say that you can’t already guess?!

Well, Ali recently moved to London to pursue a career in TV Presenting, owns a pet Chihuahua named Teresa, dresses in leather at the weekends and dyes his hair matte black every 4th of the month.

Nah, not really! All you need to know is in the short time I’ve got to know him he’s got annoyingly good and keeps getting better! Each time I see new footage he’s seemed to learnt a new trick (When the hell did he learn flip crooks?!) or taken it down something bigger and gnarlier, or smaller and tighter! I think coming from a town such as (Royal!) Tunbridge Wells has given him a unique appreciation of what is truly skateble, in other words, everything and anything! The sketchier the better. Anyway, he’s super friendly, well travelled, a funny bastard, down for life and a 100% skate rat. He’s just getting started as well. Look out for him, the Bummond is coming! (BTW, don’t call him Bummond!)

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Features

Spot Check: The Ramp

Bangkok, Thailand

I had a friend that went on a trip to LA a few years back for a photoshoot, he was going to be there for 3 days and that was all working. I asked him if he was going to take his board and he said “I wont get time to skate” and I argued that there is always time, even if its to pop an ollie over a fire hydrant and pretend to be Ray Barbee. He said “whatever”. So a week later I see him and ask how his trip went and he said it sucked, and explained it rained the whole time, his shoot got cancelled and to top it off, his hotel was 200 meters away from the newly built Vans skate park in Orange County…

So this is where we get to Bangkok. I had googled the hell out of Thailand/Bangkok/Skate/Park/Bowl/Ramp etc and came up with a website saying the only indoor park was closed and there was a dreadful looking outdoor park, but what’s the harm in taking a board?

After a couple of days being a tourist I had seen enough evidence that there were skaters in this city; the usual chipped ledges, waxed blocks and a few “No Skateboarding” signs etc. So I pulled out the address of the supposed “closed” park and had a cab drive me up there. Everything in this city is one of three things, a ghetto slum, a temple, or a shiny and brand new western looking building, it’s fascinating. Thankfully The Esplanade Complex is the latter, 6 floor mall, cinema complex, dining halls and a huge skatestore called Preduce.

After seeing a guy skating in the mall I asked him sheepishly if the skatepark was still open, half expecting disappointment of it being closed down. The guy motioned to follow him and we roll through the Mall, in to possibly one of the largest 8 room skatestores I’ve ever seen and straight in to a street course…..Hallelujah!

This park isn’t huge, but its well designed by street skaters. First odd thing is the lighting, its like skating at night in there, you can still see but any photos will look like a Zoo York advert. The other odd thing was that apart from my guide, there wasn’t anyone skating there! Turns out it was the first night of the Songkran Festival, aka Thai New Year, the whole country basically heads out for a waterfight, suits me!

Lurking in the back of the park is the main hit for me, a 4foot deep oddly shaped bowl. This lil puppy could use a bit of TLC as some of the masonite was shredded, but still, the coping was set nice, the tight looking corners were manageable and the hip was a nice float for a construction built so tight.

The street course is very well set out, has a very simple flow and you can hit everything in a run happily. All the standard issues are in here, twin marble hubbas, Wembley gap, Pier 7 Block – plus quarters, driveways and handrails. I saw a little footage of their skateshop team and they shredded it with the Adidas team a few months ago, I missed out on seeing the locals in person, but the level of skating was right up there with any other city.

So if your passing through Thailand, or randomly find yourself there, make sure you take your deck, and if the heats down, go skate round Sukhumvit too, you will undoubtedly come back with a story to tell…….enjoy!

For directions, your looking for Ratchadaphisek Road and its near the Tesco Lotus, you need to take a cab – good luck!

Visit www.esplanadethailand.com and/or www.myspace.com/preduce

Phil Procter

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Rogue Skateboards – ‘As If, And What?’

1st Month of filming

So this is it, we’ve finally committed ourselves to making the first Rogue + Friends film, now it’s time to get off our arses and put our money where our mouth is or some such phrase. Weds 11th March saw the official start to the ‘As If, And What‘ project with Sadieflip master mikeHollins. Southbank was her place of filming choice, which seemed fairly apt for the forthcoming British vid and for her there is no better way to warm up than with a couple of switch flips on the banks.

Sadie’s history runs along the lines of: grew up skating with the Death boys in her native town of ‘arlow, Essex, the place where you need a dictionary to understand anything anyone says: “OI OI webbats me eye-eels, I’s from Saffend tan innit.” Sadie first appeared on the girls’ scene when she blew away the competition at the Girls Skate Out event at Epic, Brum in 2003. After that she placed 1st countless times at the Girl Skate Jams, was in the top 3 at the Urban Games and at various international comps. Further to that she has made appearances in the Motel 6 and Death vids. She was one of the first British girls I ever saw do a handrail, and has such an envious array of flip tricks it makes you want to cry!

Back at Southbank, with Sadie’s legs in full flip mode we were in the middle of filming her switch half cab flips when a guy clutching at his alchopops approached us – appreciate this is nothing new for Southbank. But completely oblivious to the fact of what we doing, he proceeded to recount his life’s tale of how he was shot in the head and left with brain damage… what happened sounded bloody awful but some days I really think this film should be renamed “Rogue Skateboards meets Little Britain!

A couple days later saw a trip to MK with Laura Goh (formally Gallaz sponsored nee Crane). Laura is a Telford born and bread street skater – that’s the place where quite possibly the dodgiest garage music stems from and which she insists on playing at any given opportunity shabba. With her making such a long journey, we thought it only fitting to get there stupidly early to cram in as much as possible, which always seems like a good plan when you’re making arrangements. That is of course until the actual day when the alarm clock screams at you to get up! The Bus Station was (not surprisingly) completely empty apart from a couple of nicely placed shopping trolleys.

All started off pretty darn respectably with Laura clearing them comfortably with her huge ollie though things did soon disintegrate into extreme trolley surfing around the plaza. It admittedly did seem pretty funny until local girl Zeta Rush, who’d unfortunately never seen another girl skater before turned up! After convincing the poor girl we hadn’t just been let out of the “special” hospital for the day she took us to various spots dotted around the city, with a quick battery recharge stop off at Bucks Boarding Company – cheers guys. Ben, Laura’s husband, motto to her is “Go(h) faster Laura Go(h)”, which was very kindly shouted at her at every given opportunity. It’s great being able to hassle someone else to do crazy tricks down a set of steps whilst you can stand back and explain just quite how difficult it is to film – hmm!

Helena “battery legs” Long was the last rider to be captured on camera this month. This incredibly enthusiastic and talented Vans rider has written a whole itinerary (on a scrap of her dad’s Guardian newspaper) of about 2000 different street spots that she reckoned could be filmed over a five-day period!! However after spending a couple of hours wandering the streets of South East London to find an “amazing spot” she’d once seen from the DLR in 2006 (around the same area they had shot The Football Factory and Little Dorrit) – it turned out that it was so good that we spent several hours there – the list then may perhaps take a little longer than was first reckoned.

In the middle of a slightly dubious looking housing estate, part of the Rotherhithe Boys territory where you’d definitely not want to be seen hanging with the wrong crew – there was a somewhat bizarre looking wavy block in the middle of a grass patch which ended in a pavement gap to road. Helena cleared it easily with kickflips, inward heels and switch heels.

On leaving the spot she realised that we could have missed the long two hour mission walk there, as there was a station 2 minutes away – oh well! A couple of other spots hit up that day included a tailslide on a block near London Bridge and a backside 50-50 on a wavy block at the Thames Barrier.

The first few weeks are out of the way and I think it’s really just sinking in quite what we have taken on although with Nikita’s Maria Falbo relocating to Barca for 6 months, filming prospects are definitely looking up!

Find us at www.rogueskateboards.blogspot.com/

Cheers Jenna

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Features

Spot Check – Tolworth

Photo’s by Zac
Video by Alan Christensen

Surrey has never really been famous for skateparks but over the years it has had its fair share. Tolworth is not far from Worcester Park where the the once infamous Dorchester Park spine ramp was built in the early 90’s. Then there’s the New Malden set up with a vert ramp and mini that was also fun. This entire area has always had a very strong skate scene but it has never had a concrete bowl until now.

Fortunately the guys at Wheelscape have now fixed that problem and left us all a bowl that is challenging to say the least. The park is situated just off the A3 motorway that you can whizz down to from Hammersmith in 25 minutes if there’s no traffic. Embedded into a wonderfully laid out kids playground the bowl sits pretty next to the local bowls club in landscaped space that is rarely seen near any skate park. It’s a strange combination as you would think that the elderly peeps at the bowls club would have been up in arms about sharing their space with skaters, but somehow the old farts are cool as, and everyone respects the space around them.

The main feature is the pool coping that glistens on top of the tight pocket that has zero flat bottom. It’s gnarly to skate. Once you are in here it’s do or die as there’s no room to think. It’s certainly a challenge and on this particular session from the video we shot on the day we visited this spot, 5 people were taken out from a total of 10. The bowl itself comes equipt with a slightly over-vert rainbow wall and a hip that leads to the chalice of doom. The pool coping makes the gnarliest noise you have ever heard, and made even better noises when Greg Nowik turned up and back-smithed this all afternoon. It’s not deep, no more than 4ft, it’s fast, there’s no walls that are tweaked and overall there’s an element of feeling safe at this park compared to a lot of other skateparks that are dumped into the middle of crazy housing estates.

Death Skateboards Nick Zorlac has been shredding this place a lot since it was built. So, Nick, this seems to be your new home these days…

Yup, it’s a cool little spot.

For people that have not skated this bowl before, what exactly does Tolworth have to offer?

It’s like a bowled out concrete mini, but half of it has no flat bottom and fast pool coping. It’s in a park, nice surroundings. Bit sandy though.

What was the first impression you got from skating it?

That it was really fun but hard to skate the pool bit. Happy to have something like this in the London area.

Are designs like this more of a challenge than your average bowl?

Yeah, everything happens real quick. Pretty unique.

Good feeling riding pool coping again? Is there enough of this stuff in UK skateparks?

Yeah, nothing else like it. No where near enough of it in the UK.

What would you change about it if you had the chance?

If you want me to be picky.. Maybe make the metal coping stick out a tiny bit more, and the pool coping stick out a bit less in places. And have the bowled bit of metal coping so you could hit it easier.

Did that six-pack taste good on the day I didn’t hit the pool coping?

Haha of course it did! You can win one back next time though. Or lose another one..

And last but not least, are you partial for a spot of Green Bowls across the car park in the near future?

Well I might be, but I don’t think I’ve got a choice in the matter. I tried to go in there today to ask to borrow a broom.. they looked at us but wouldn’t buzz us in! Denied! I bought one from the hardware store down the road for £1.99. Good value!

The park can be found at King George’s Recreation Ground on Jubilee Way in Tolworth, Surrey. Click here for a map. It’s also close to Tolworth Station. Get down there now the sun is out!

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Features

Fresh Blood – Daniel Clarke

Photo: Front tail, bigspin out @ St.Pauls by Rob Shaw
Switch Tre flip roadgap filmed by Jake Harris

WHO?

Full Name: Daniel Clarke.

Age:19.

Sponsors: Jart Skateboards, King Apparel, Force Trucks, DVS.

Hometown: Ealing, London.

Skating since: I was about 12.

Favourite tricks: Nollie flips, Switch heels, front krooks.

Favourite spots/terrain: Creteil and Bercy in Paris.

Inspired by: Skate videos, the people I skate with, magazines etc

Hates: Snapping more boards than the average skater.

Loves: A heated session, discovering new spots, skating abroad etc

Can’t live without… skating

Skate video: At the moment it has to be Mindfield, all time favourite would be Modus Operandi.

Fave sesh: Skating Creteil in Paris, perfect marble floor and ledges with all the Square One lot..Good times!

Music to die to: Tough question. I would have to go with any song by The Stone Roses.

Ultimate aim in life: To enjoy myself and keep skating no matter what.

TEZ FROM 2DIST ON DANIEL:

The old ‘were do I start’ with Daniel Clarke……well the truth is I’ve never had the pleasure of meeting the guy (team manager of the year award i hear!) but from his first visit up North, good friend and scout for fellow team riders Eddie Belvedere gave him the serious thumbs up. So instead of being the old school team manager of hanging out with his riders, I prefer the modern approach of keeping in contact via facefuck. This is how I find out if he needs boards and what parties he’s been going to as late!

So from our bizarre type internet friendship (sounds so wrong) I’ve come to realise Daniel is pretty dammed focused on this thing we call skateboarding and I cant wait to see his full part in the fourth coming Square One DVD So till we meet I will just admire like the rest and be stoked to be the one who sends him his Jart packages. ‘Keep em peeled’ as they say for Mr Clarke and I shall definitely be doing the same!

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Grim up North Jam #3 – The Ripped Skatepark

Words and photos by Philip Procter

It’s Grim Ooop North and no cobbled Yorkshire town is grimmer than Dewsbury, or more aptly known as Doomsbury. The credit crunch didn’t start in America, its been manifesting itself in recession up here since the miners strike and guess what? Nobody up here cares one little bit. The Ripped Skatepark defies local, and world crisis and plods from one month to the next scraping together barely enough loot to keep the doors open, let alone the electricity on.

So on to the jam, this place has maximum crashup factor during busy sessions, add in a jam format and your always going to get carnage, this is no place for tight trucks. The local kids showed out in force and eagerly waited for the out of towners to struggle with the skateparks own brand of challenging obstacles. The main focus was the Death Box and countless wallride combos, Death’s Moggins persistently kept at the 8 feet high vert box to pull a frontside tailblock that Grosso would have been proud of at the Turf. Riot Squads Alex Barton unexpectedly exchanged his clean style for gnarly and took the best trick comp with a barrage of indy nosepicks, front tail slides and a blunt rocks on the box, with a notable mention to Jay Andrews for sticking with his back disaster and pulling it in the jam, and winning a set of wheels for his troubles.

Barrow-in-Furness’s Joxa pulled out some unorthodox lines around the park and without even sessioning the death box managed to chuck in gap to disaster and front rocks after attacking every vertical surface in the park. Little Alex Decuna took the now mandatory game of s.k.a.t.e. and tirelessly hit every obstacle in the park for good measure.

The local park sharks had the spot on lock, hitting closed off areas without fear of reprisal and definitely took some chunks out of the gnarly authentic pool copin. Music on the day was DJ’d by Livewire, who killed it on the 1200’s with some Vadim enthused hiphop beats while Mury P and Bane from No Pretence held it down on the mic, looks like there is a strong local hiphop scene up here that’s worth keeping an eye on. Props to Lovenskate, Death, Lakai, DVS and Matix for gladly supplying flow of proddy for the toss and prizes for the rippers.

Jams like this are the lifeblood of smaller skateparks, and it’s only a matter of time before the influx of council endorsed outdoor comes to an end, plus British weather only allows us to skate them for what? Half of the year? So indoor parks like the Ripped really need all the support they can get, especially after the effort put in to keeping this place open, skaters really need to mark Ravensthorpe on the map when planning road trips this summer or sadly, it will die.

Hit it up….RIP IT UP!!!

Peep the Spot Check of thispark here and visit www.myspace.com/savetheripped to help make a difference.

Footage below by Phil Procter and Claire Wilson.


More Skateboarding >>

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Fresh Blood – Casper Brooker

Heroin Skateboards announced last week that Chris Pulman had hung up his trucks for the company for the very last time and was stepping down from his professional duties as a skateboarder. The evolution of professional skateboarding is key to its existance and each year the older generation leave legacies worldwide for the new breed to pick up on and fill their volcanized shoes.

This month Heroin Skateboards welcome Casper Brooker from Surrey who at 15 has enough in the bag to sink a ship. Casper is the first of a series of Fresh Blood features to run here throughout 2009 focusing on the introduction of this year’s ams to lookout for..

WHO?

Full Name: Casper David Brooker

Age: 15

Sponsors: Heroin Skateboards

Hometown: Purley, it’s near Croydon

Skating since: I was 9 so like 6 years

Favourite tricks: Frontside flip, Hardflip, nosegrinds, melons out of tranny, 360 pop shuvs, late shuv, back bigspin flip.

Favourite terrain: stairs, handrails, transition, ledge and stupid stuff

Inspired by: Andrew Reynolds, Figgy, Ellington, Heath Kirchart and the Heroin team.

Hates: Chavs, skatestoppers and school is pretty bone.

Loves: Skateboarding, sweets, Stockwell, Southbank, grape soda you know, the usual stuff.

Can’t live without: Skateboarding, sweets, ipod.

Skate video: Mind Field, Baker 3, Baker has a Deathwish, Horizons, Magic Sticky Hand.

Fave sesh: Always fun sessioning Stockwell and various other places with Fos and Paddy and I always love skating Southbank and other places with my mates Matt, Samtamont, Kerri Jamie , Brooks, Jackalous, Jin, Yap, Alec, Harry, Josh Parrett, Matt Plymouth and Mikey Cheah.

Music to die to: Any Morrissey or The Smiths.

Ultimate aim in life: Skateboard till I’m dead…

FOS ON BROOKER:

I’m always hesitant when it comes to sponsoring kids. Firstly they look out of proportion to me most of the time, with either massive heads, or massive feet, so that always puts me off.

Secondly they get sponsored and it can go to their heads, they suddenly think they’re the shit and start acting like right little pricks. Neither of these apply to Capser, he’s just a little dude with rad style who shreds, and who has a totally positive attitude. He’s the first to start skating at a spot and the last to finish, a little ball of energy, I don’t know if this is cos of his age or because he’s hopped up on Haribo and Lucozade. Casper isn’t a kid, he’s one of our crew…

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Features

Spot Check: Stockwell Skatepark

Since the 1970’s, the infamous Stockwell Skatepark (aka Brixton Beach) has been sessioned by thousands of skaters, BMX riders and a million little shits on bikes.

Over the last few years though, ‘The Curse of Stockwell’ has played havoc with the people involved in the project. Some loons say that the park was built on remains from ancient history and it’s haunted, others say it was just bad luck but the park took a man’s life as he skated there whilst on holiday, 2 other people connected with the park also passed away throughout the rebuild and the surface and overall organisation from the contractors allowed the park to become more of a building site than a beach.

All of this activity has annoyed the local South London skaters throughout the changes but fortunately the park is now back to its best with some new additions and most importantly a surface that should hold throughout the coming changes of seasons. Phil Procter spoke to local skater and skate park designer Jeremy Donaldson about the ongoing project that seems to have a very happy ending.

The first time I rode Stockwell was about 15 years ago and was a scary experience, the lack of coping freaked me out, what were your first impressions?

Totally stoked, I couldn’t believe how amazing it was, all the organic shapes just ready for you to invent your own way to skate it. I used to have pictures of Stockwell (and that old Tijuana park) on my wall and the reality was better than I’d imagined. Even back when it was rough as the Hackney bumps, it seemed smooth to me after all that Irish tarmac I grew up skating.

It was definitely rough, but I remember when they first tried to resurface it and it was an awful final finish, how did that happen?

The park had been resurfaced twice before I got my way and had it done with a full layer of reinforced concrete. The first time was the legendary pink surface that Matt McMullan (RIP) and Gnarly Tom worked to get put down. It was a lot better than the old surface but it started breaking away at any weak spots because it was only on thin surface layer. With a badly cracked concrete surface underneath, that made for lots of cracks in the red surface which peeled back away from the cracks. That gave us a smooth surface but with foot wide rough depressions – all the locals learned how to ride the park despite them but it wasn’t ideal.

When did you get involved with improving the park?

I’d finished my architecture post-grad in 2000, been traveling to the US to skate the new parks out there and the new phase of concrete skatepark building in this country was just getting started. So, when Brixton Cycles started a petition to get the cracks between the pink surface repaired it was the perfect time for me to jump in. I realised that more of the same surface would have been more of the same problems, so I started making proposals for how to resurface it properly. I registered www.stockwellskatepark.com and Gorm set-up the website which we used to raise awareness and let the council know how many people out there cared about the park.

Did you always want to add to the park or just fix up the red surface?

Having ridden some of the early Oregon parks I’d seen what could be done in parks less than half the size of Stockwell. It seemed obvious to me that instead of pouring a load of flat concrete dead-ends that we change the profile of the floor before re-concreting. That’s what we did eventually but it was a long road! I made a couple of photo-montages with a new design superimposed across the back edge of the park, put them on the website and then all hell broke loose! I hit upon the problem of working on an existing park – you have park locals who love their park and don’t want to compromise it and those who don’t care about the park other than as an opportunity for something completely different; my buddy from Dreamland just wanted to bulldoze the whole thing and start again. That sort of idea was pretty unpopular down at the park, so we had to work hard to calm things down and make sure everyone had a real say about how things were going to turn out.

What were the major obstacles that slowed things down?

Politics, money & experience. We had to get the council and local organisations behind the idea, and then get the funding to make it possible. That took long, slow, relentless pressure, and good help from Dave Carlin, Gorm Ashurst, Ad Downie, James Williams and countless others who helped out with our writing letters campaigns, and from the originator of the first campaign, the legendary and sorely missed Matt McMullan. We also made a couple of good allies in the council and had the help and support of the local councilors, Paul McGlone, Sally Prentice and Neil Sabharwal. This got us on our way.

Back then, I didn’t have much of a track record with building concrete parks, so I needed to call upon the contacts I’d made in the US to back me up. When I took Stefan Hauser (PTR Skateparks) down to meet the council and he told them what I’d been saying about the park for two years, they finally believed it. With a few respected skatepark builders lined up for the project, we thought we were good to go.

I guess this is where the politics politics slowed things down right?

Yeah, unfortunately the council’s tendering procedures resulted in the contract being awarded one of their ‘approved contractors’. They’d held themselves out as concrete specialists but it soon transpired there expertise was car parks, not skateparks! Their first attempt produced a horrible rough, dusty resurfacing, but we didn’t give up and nor did the Council. The Council had to stick with their Contractor for legal reasons but equally, the Contractor had to get the job done properly. Whilst all the arguments where going on I managed to develop fresh proposals and more money was raised, so by the time the Contractor was ready to try again, the project was significantly more ambitious. We put the contractor in touch with Duracrete, Gravity and with Wheelscape, whom they subcontracted to resurface the old park properly and make all the new additions. Nick from Wheelscape hired some of the Stockwell locals onto his crew to make sure the park didn’t lose it’s familar shape when 5″ of new concrete got laid over it.

Just when things were looking good again, tragedy struck. Nick Fyfe, founder of Wheelscape died. He’d been ill for some time but had kept on polishing the concrete until his last days. As a final insult, it transpired that the concrete supplier had been ‘economising’ on the amount of cement in the concrete, making it weak, and most of the new concrete needed to be taken up. More legal wrangling meant more delays. Meanwhile, the Contractor decided to hire some of Wheelscape’s crew and the park locals directly to carry on with the job and get it finished. All of us involved had to work really hard to save the project and make the park what it is today. Everyone bust their nuts, working early, late, weekends, paid and unpaid; Gav, Miller, Chris, Roland, Peter, Tony the Pirate, Michael and of course, Gee – those guys are the heroes of this project.

As far as the new design, did you consult with the locals, or was it your own vision?

The design process was a real learning curve for me. Having seen the wide range of reactions to the proposals I drew up off the top of my head in 2002, I decided to try a different approach – the one I still use today. I called a big meeting at the skatepark to find out what everyone wanted – what they wanted to add, what they didn’t mind changing and how we wanted the park to flow overall. During this time we also built a few things in timber and in concrete to try out new ideas. I’d get a few “what is he up to now, how is that going to work?” sort of comments but when we finished each piece they were always popular. It’s tricky to do that in a skatepark you build from scratch but it worked well here. It gave everyone confidence in the project, and gave me confidence in what I was doing. Stockwell was a long slow project, and meanwhile, I’d done Cantelowes, started Hereford, The Level in Brighton and a few other projects. So, when the time came to build for real, the design I produced was so rooted in Stockwell itself – the old park, the additions, the locals and the stuff we skate – it had a piece of everyone in there and we all agreed that it was the one.

The surface is certainly the best the place ever had, how do you feel the overall design works?

I spent such a long time trying to chase perfection for the park that I had a hard time seeing it like everyone else does. I had to go away for a few weeks; when I came back and saw how stoked everyone was, I figured it was time to get back in the session. I’ve been loving it ever since. Well, until last week when I said “bye-bye skatepark” and “hello hospital”.

The new stuff is certainly more challenging, it’s almost Portland like, do you think it appeals to all levels of skaters or does it make people have to step up to get the most out of the layout?

Trips to Burnside certainly inspired my mission, but not the scale of this park – there’s no 10 foot bowls. I think it’s still as accessible as ever, which was very important ot the feel of the park, but yes, it has a lot more opportunities if you want to step up. I think that makes it appeal to more skaters than before, the only downside to that is it being so busy.

Who shreds the park the most in your opinion? Personally I could watch Ivan speed around it all day…

I can’t really single one person out – Ivan and all the other locals have got some killer lines, as does honorary local Chris Ault. Anyone feeling the park, going fast – that’s what I like to see.

Right, on to new projects, whats next? Hereford?

We’re just waiting for the concrete to cure on the first phase of Hereford. We’ve built both the biggest and the smallest stuff there first – a little curved manny pad and a big double set, some mellow bank hips and pool. I’ve certainly enjoyed skating the bits that I’ve tested and can’t wait to get back up there for more skating and more building. We start building in Uckfield, E. Sussex this month but the rest of the new work seems to get ever progressively further away from home; there’s a Stockwell inspired park near Aberdeen, a skatepark and another bowl both in Macclesfield, all commissioned by Wheelscape and, directly though my work with Robert Dye Associates. I have also just designed a big plaza in Doha, Qatar amongst other things.

Awesome, you will have to keep us posted on the progress, anything you want to add?

I’d just like to raise a glass to the heavens and toast Matt McMullan and Nick Fyfe. They’d both be so proud to see Stockwell today and we all wish they could. And, I’ve got to give a big thank you to Dave Carlin for all his help too, and everyone who is a part of Stockwell – it exists because of everything everyone put into it – cheers everyone!

Watch Crossfire’s Stockwell edit courtesy of Alan Christensen here and look out for an official opening event in the next few months.