Following the community consultation for the Bob MacQuarrie Skate Park (also known as the East District Skate Park) on February 18th, members of the Ottawa Skateboard Association met and discussed the proposed options. The OSA also supported the design consultation by sharing feedback forms with local skateboarders and collecting these feedback forms on behalf of skateboarders to submit to the city and the park designer. 

In addition to acting as a liaison between the community and the designers, the OSA also drafted a document highlighting our proposed modifications (including illustrations) we would like to see made to the proposed designs and our reasoning behind them. 

The purpose of this letter of support was to engage the City of Ottawa to form a partnership to build a DIY skateboard park. We proposed a partnership that would involve the design and construction of skate spaces to be  completed by the OSA, while the Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Services would be responsible for obtaining necessary permits for site development and construction in relation to the skateboard park. The Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Services would ensure that all of the OSA’s designs and builds during proposition and construction, including permanent and temporary features, meet acceptable standards of safety and would be subject to regular inspection in accordance with established procedures for comparable equipment. 

Once developed, any proposed alterations to the skateboard park structure by the OSA would be reviewed and approved by the City of Ottawa prior to construction. The Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Services would be responsible for costs associated with the installation, operation, and maintenance of the skateboard park as a recreation facility.

This was an immense opportunity to create a positive addition to the community, which will support an active lifestyle and healthy living among the youth in communities in the City of Ottawa. The OSA is ready to partner with the City of Ottawa to create this critical community infrastructure.

The purpose of this project was to lobby the city to build lighting at the Charlie Bowins skateboard park. Lighting at Charlie Bowins Skatepark will allow for increased use of the facility and decreased criminal activity. Through close consultations with communities of surrounding parks and users of the skate facilities, lighting and shading have come up as the most important demands. It has also been consistently brought up as a concern that none of Ottawa’s skate parks have lighting, and Charlie Park could serve as an illustration of how providing lighting to these facilities will reduce crime and provide optimal usability.

With the addition of lighting at Charlie Park, it will be the only facility with this amenity in the city. This will make this already popular park more accessible to users, as well as a model for how these public spaces, when provided with improved lighting, signal greater community investment leading to increased community pride, cohesion, informal social control and the fostering of community confidence. 

Thoughtfully designed lighting not only has the ability to prevent crime in parks, but will also ensure optimal use of Charlie Park. Primary users are kids and teens who often only have a few sparing hours before or after dinner and homework for recreational activity before the sun goes down. Management of sport needs to be positioned within the context of the lived experiences of today’s children and adolescents. This means fitting sports into lives that are not only time-challenged and highly dependent on technology, but also waning in other communal supports. Skateboarding and skateboard parks are a perfect fit to meet the changing youth culture and providing lighting for the facility will allow for optimal use given the time constraints for its primary users.