Not Just Skating By
For years, professional skateboarder Rob Dyrdek has ranted about wanting to build a skate plaza: a skate park integrated into the urban environment as a landscaped, multi-use public space. When he got word in 2002 that his hometown of Kettering, Ohio, was planning a skate park, he saw his chance.
Pro skateboarder Rob Dyrdek has spent most of his life at war with city architects. They’d design public parks perfect for skating; he’d get arrested for skating there. They’d install steel knobs to keep skaters away; he’d show up in the middle of the night with a generator and cut the knobs off with a grinder. “It’s the most misunderstood sport there is,” says Dyrdek. “People can’t fathom that skate parks don’t do the sport justice. Instead it’s handrails and urban architecture that make the perfect skate spots.”
Dyrdek approached Site Design Group, the Tempe, Arizona, firm that had been awarded the project contract, with his concept for the world’s first official skate plaza. They suggested Dyrdek learn how to draft it himself. “He was very particular about what he wanted to implement into the design,” says Brad Siedlecki, designer and project manager at Site. “We worked with Rob to make sure his ideas could be translated into the construction documents.” Dyrdek photographed and measured some of the world’s most famous skate obstacles, put his 27,000-square-foot dream on paper, and began selling his idea to city planners.
Dyrdek has not only made his truce with city architects—he recently worked with one on a Shreveport, Louisiana, plaza, the first time a city architect has collaborated with a pro skater—but he’s given them a new type of space to design. “My plan was to create a model where city planners and city architects could take on the concept of an urban plaza, since it’s already what they do,” says Dyrdek. “The way I envision it, in the future there’s beautiful sculpture and architecture that happens to be skateable.”
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Rob Dyrdek is a icon of his time.. If not for Dyrdek, Some kids would not even know what skateboarding is.. in the time of technology most kids spend their time in front of the tv if not for shows like fantasy factory and robin big to inspire the youth of today who knows were skating would be... Thank you rob sincerely Huge fan David Haston......
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