San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Skatin’ Place gets bold blast of color

Golden Gate Park’s longtime gathering spot is spruced up with vibrant mural

- By Ryan Kost

For decades, people have been coming to the Skatin’ Place, a closed-off section of Sixth Avenue in Golden Gate Park, to roller-skate and roller-blade along to music.

As David Miles, the founder of the Church of 8 Wheels known as the “Godfather of Skate,” says, “It’s as much a part of the park experience as going to the museum.”

But on Friday morning, after a few extended closures over the past four months, the Skatin’ Place reopened with a new look. A largescale mural, paying homage to the area’s decades-long history as a meeting space for skaters, now covers the asphalt, defining it as a dedicated spot for the rollerskat­ing community. There’s a new asphalt slab, too, in place of the old one that had experience­d years of wear and tear.

“It is an amazing, iconic place and it deserved an amazing makeover,” said Tamara Aparton, a spokespers­on for San Francisco Recreation and Park. “It’s just been generation­s of skaters there, and it’s a really remarkable, welcoming, inclusive community.

“We want to make sure that it’s there for generation­s to come.” The mural was designed by Aimee Bruckner, a San Francisco artist, who has been part of the city’s skate scene for more than a decade. “Psychedeli­c Golden Gate Skate,” as the piece is called, takes the form of a color-filled 28-by-93foot oval. The mural, Bruckner says, makes a subtle nod to the Golden Gate Bridge, with lavalamp-like waves coming in from either side that evoke the city’s countercul­tural history. Naturally, she also put a roller skate right at

the center.

Bruckner said she kept the design “cool and unique” but also “not so crazy that when you're out there you get disoriente­d.” And she wanted to be sure the mural didn't overshadow the community that skates there — over the years people have shown up to skate in furry leg warmers and rainbow sequins and butterfly wings.

“It's the people and the skaters that bring all the color to this area,” she said. “I don't want to compete with all the great styles and fashions.”

The park means a lot for Bruckner, in part because she found skating at a time when she was dealing with losing the use of her hand and struggling to figure out how to move forward in her art practice. Skating offered an “alternativ­e creative outlet” — “a bit of an escape back to a simpler time, a funner time.” She's since found a path forward with her art, and the mural, for her, symbolizes “a really great combinatio­n of the two worlds.”

As with most things skate-related in San Francisco, the mural —

Rik Panganiban tries out the newly reopened Skatin’ Place, which also features fresh pavement.

and the Skatin' Place, too, really — can be traced back to Miles.

Skating has always had a home in Golden Gate Park — John McLaren, the park's first superinten­dent, incorporat­ed a rink into the Children's Playground in 1891

— but the sport really hit its stride in the '70s. (So much so that it briefly sparked a public panic.)

By the mid '80s, though, the number of skaters was declining and Miles saw Sixth Avenue as a place to create a protected home for the community. He says he spoke to the city in 1985 about keeping it a street (rather than tearing it up and planting grass) while also keeping it closed off to cars. What started as a 30-day trial became a 60-day trial and then a 90-day trial, and eventually it stuck. “It's just become better and better, year after year.”

“It's the happiest place in Golden Gate Park,” Miles says. “You have the whole mixture of everybody who makes the city great. It's everything that San Francisco is.” When Miles heard that the city would be laying down new asphalt, he pitched the idea of the mural. After some public meetings and the blessing of the park department and the city's Arts Commission, it was a done deal. (Recreation and Park paid for the concrete; Bruckner donated her time working on the piece.)

At a time when rinks are closing, Miles said, it's clear the future of skating is outside.

“I believe you should have a spot like this in every city,” he said. “It's really become a source of pride for people.”

Miles and the park department are planning an event from 11 a.m. to noon Saturday to really celebrate the Skatin' Place and its new look. But he's pretty sure it will be full well before that.

 ?? Photos by Jana Asenbrenne­rova / Special to The Chronicle ?? These skaters are among the first to enjoy the new mural at the renovated skating area in Golden Gate Park.
Photos by Jana Asenbrenne­rova / Special to The Chronicle These skaters are among the first to enjoy the new mural at the renovated skating area in Golden Gate Park.
 ?? ?? “The Godfather of Skate,” David Miles (center), and his cohorts turn out to salute a mural designed by Aimee Bruckner, an artist and skater.
“The Godfather of Skate,” David Miles (center), and his cohorts turn out to salute a mural designed by Aimee Bruckner, an artist and skater.
 ?? Jana Asenbrenne­rova / Special to The Chronicle ??
Jana Asenbrenne­rova / Special to The Chronicle

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