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Keith
Marsden is a caring father who was concerned about the lack of good
skateboarding facilities available for his young son, and recognised
the need for somewhere for young people to practise their sport,
and decided to do something about it.
'"It's not enough to just build a skate
park and then leave kids to it", says Keith. "You need
to engage the youngsters in the project so they can go on to enjoy
it.
You
need role models, mentors and buddies in place to keep the thing
going. Otherwise the kids get bored and crime sets in".
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| Keith
Marsden - the inspiration behind Epic. |
Epic
opened in 2002 in the old bus garage in Moseley.
It's certainly got skate style - from the outside it looks derelict
- inside isn't much better - but then a good skate park doesn't
need shagpile carpet and gloss paint.
Keith
Marsden was a marketing consultant with a top firm and living in
Suffolk. His teenage son Will was crazy about skateboarding, and
Keith took time out to take Will to various skate parks.
Research
trips to the USA
He
was amazed at the poor quality and filthy state of the facilities
he saw, and recognised the need for something better for this popular
sport.
So
he decided to do something about it and started with research trips
to America - the mecca of skateboarding.
He
looked at the design and culture of boarding in general, and sought
the advice of US experts along with the opinions of his teenage
son and friends.
The
next step was to find the right venue in the UK. Keith looked at
potential sites all over the country and knew he'd got it right
when he came across the Moseley building.
Desperate
to get in
Birmingham
was the largest significant UK city with the poorest quality skateparks.
The empty Moseley bus garage ticked all the boxes, right down to
good public transport access.
So
the Marsden family packed up and moved from Suffolk to the Midlands.
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| Adam
and Simon use the skate park. "It keeps kids off the streets,
they say. |
Even
while the site was being prepared Keith said youngsters couldn't
wait to get in.
"The
place was ankle deep in pigeon muck and we had a heck of job to
get it in a respectable state.
We'd
find kids using the ramps in the building even before it was finished
and open to the public - they just couldn't stay away".
The
Moseley park was mapped out by two expert designers, - one from
California, the other from Europe.
Buddies
and mentors
The
zones in the park are for everyone from beginners to professionals.
The site is for BMX and inline skaters too. And the park boasts
the biggest half pipe in Europe.
Epic
now has 10,000 members - (note there are only about 100 girls -
come on girls!)
There's
a café, shop, loos, gig stage, and even a mini cinema for
showing skate films. Epic has its own buddies and mentors to be
onhand for young boarders, as well as qualified first aiders.
Staff at Epic are low key, and supervision is understated.
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| Bob
teaches at Epic |
The
skate culture itself involves older more experienced boarders looking
out for younger ones, and adhereing to unwritten rules about respect.
And Keith knows that.
Bob Town, from Sutton, is just 16 and teaches boarding at Epic.
"It's
a great skate park because there's always something different to
do. It's difficult to get bored here".
Healthy
culture
Keith
saw that in some skate parks kids would do everything they knew
on a skateboard and were stuck after 30 minutes. At Epic they offer
youngsters the chance to progress and try something new, developing
their skills.
It's
a good philosophy, and it works. If people are concerned about getting
kids off the street and tackling obesity with exercise, they'd find
inspiration at Epic.
Managed
properly, the skateboarding phenomenon tackles and wins over lots
of social issues.
"Etiquette
exists in skateboarding. It's impressive to witness - it's about
having a natural respect for each other. It doesn't deserve its
reputation for being hardcore and anarchic", says Keith.
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| "Etiquette
exists in skateboarding- it's not hardcore and anarchic". |
The
skate park is great value for a day out. You can hire gear from
the park, even get a lesson.
Tony
Hawk in Moseley in July!!
Keith
runs all-nighters from time to time, and this summer is running
a fantastic Skate School with all-day sessions involving lessons,
skate movies and free-skating. Summer school is £15 a day,
or £50 a week.
The
summer school is being launched on July 5th by the most famous boarder
on the planet - American Tony Hawk. Hawk earns more in his sport
than Mr Beckham does in his. And that's going some.
If
you'd like to know more or get involved in Epic skating or attend
the summer school, details are on the left.
Will's
dad is a hero
With
a supercool dad who's now an expert in boarding and has set up the
best venue in Europe, Will Marsden must be the most popular boy
in school
..
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