40 miles east of Los Angeles,
in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains,
is a pipe.
Its job is to funnel water
from this dam
into this channel,
which borders Los Angeles County.
This pipe might look like any other
scattered across the West,
but in the world of skateboarding,
it’s a mecca.
One time my dad drove
my friend and I there, but we didn't
really know where we were going.
And we finally came to a spot that
looked like it was probably connected
to Mount Baldy,
and we were told that we had to leave.
If you don’t know, that’s Tony Hawk,
one of the greatest skaters of all time.
This year he finally made it to the Baldy
Pipe.
It's a mission.
You gotta hike around.
You've got to try to dodge anyone you see,
that might try to kick you out,
because there's plenty of patrols there.
And then there's this legendary gap
that sort of rite of passage.
You have to jump over it if
you're going to be a true Baldy participant.
I jumped the gap for the record.
The Baldy Pipe is one of hundreds,
if not thousands of legendary skate spots
around the world
that are hidden in plain sight.
This is the story of how places like this,
became this.
It’s America’s newest sport, and it’s
called skateboarding.
In 1965, skateboarding was a full blown fad.
The fad raced from west coast to east,
and soon there was skateboarding in Central
Park.
The first big wave of skateboarding is as
a surf related activity,
in California,
but also in Florida, also in Australia.
There’s a great similarity between the sport
of
skateboarding and sport of surfing.
And it's basically people pretending
they're on an ocean wave.
Iain Borden is an architectural historian,
and author of this incredible deep dive
into skateboarding history.
The big milestone is probably the
introduction of polyurethane wheels to
skateboarding in the early 1970s.
In the 1960s, skateboard wheels were
typically made from metal or clay,
which limited the breadth of maneuvers
skateboarders could do.
The grip provided by polyurethane wheels
revitalized the sport and opened it
up to more adventurous terrain.
By the mid 1970s, skateboarders
were constantly on the lookout for bigger
wave-like structures. And empty pools,
drainage ditches, and gigantic pipes quickly
became skateboarding’s most coveted spots.
The moment you find bits of architecture
that look a bit like an ocean wave,
the architecture changes,
that bit of asphalt is no longer a bit of
asphalt,
And skaters start to do things that you
couldn't do on a surfboard.
They do no-handed airs,
they do invert airs,
they do rock ‘n’ rolls.
So there's a cultural shift there as well.
Los Angeles skaters found a small
reservoir in the Hollywood
Hills they called the Viper Bowl.
And Wallows, a ditch that cut through a
neighborhood on the Island of O‘ahu in Hawaii.
It was pretty notorious because a lot
of the 70s skaters rode it when they went to Hawaii.
Or, Hawaiian skaters were riding it.
And, it's this drainage ditch that just keeps
going down different shelves.
There's no drainage ditch really like that.
Paved school yards situated in the
Los Angeles hillsides became a
proving ground for young skaters too.
The banks at Kenter Canyon Elementary,
right here, were frequented by skaters since
the 1960s,
and by the 1970s, it was one of the most
widely seen backdrops for
skate photographs and videos.
One of the things the skaters found
is that in various places, particularly out
in the Arizona desert,
they'd find these great big full pipes.
Most of these pipes were from the Central
Arizona Project,
a massive water management initiative
that began construction in 1973.
For skateboarders, it was paradise.
And then there was the Baldy Pipe,
which skaters first discovered in 1969.
Images of skaters riding its 15-foot cavernous
walls
turned this pipe into a skateboarding landmark.
It wasn’t just photos, the Baldy pipe was
also featured in skate films, which were rising
in popularity.
Just to get there you have to cross
a 20 foot deep pit on an old log.
So video becomes very important in this.
It's how something exists in history as
told in video.
Around 1976 investors saw a huge opportunity
to build parks that mimicked the ever growing
list
of sought after skate spots,
and started building them around California,
the country,
and the world.
This may seem an odd place to be,
the middle of an empty swimming pool,
but this isn’t just your ordinary everyday
swimming pool.
This is the infamous Dog Bowl, a skateboarder's paradise located in Marina Del Rey, California.
Skatopia, one of the most popular parks in
California, is big business.
There were full pipes, and pools,
and winding concrete slalom courses
that mimicked drainage ditches.
But it wasn’t perfect.
Soon after these huge skateparks were built,
the insurance needed to run them skyrocketed.
And then skateboarding crashes.
After skatepark numbers dwindled,
skateboarders were back to square one.
In the eighties, it's mainly much more of
a
fewer number of die hard skaters.
They continued to discover more and more empty
pools,
like this one in the middle of the California
desert.
That used to be an old nudist camp,
and that was the pool that they had.
And somehow, whenever the nudist camp went
bust,
I don’t know how else to say it.
the pool was skateable and some people found
it.
It was discovered around 1982,
and was rightly dubbed the Nude Bowl.
In the Arizona Desert another incredible location
was added to the list: The Love Bowl.
It was actually two giant white backdrops
from an abandoned TV studio.
But skateboarders also did something else.
People started to build their own ramps.
They started to build ramps with walls
that emulated pools,
but with flat sections.
And that became the half pipe.
1987’s The Search for Animal Chin is a skate
film
that illustrates the natural progression
from ditches and pools to half-pipes.
In the opening scene the skateboarders take
on
Wallows, that Hawaii drainage ditch.
Yes, that’s a young Tony Hawk.
And on one of the very last scenes,
I hung up going down one of the shelves,
and basically sprawled onto the flat
and got chewed up on my elbow,
and I got a staph infection.
So the rest of my Hawaiian vacation
was spent in a hotel on antibiotics.
Later on in the film they end up at a
motel pool in Southern California.
Uh do you have a pool?
Yeah, we have a pool, but you know
it hasn’t been filled in two years.
Do you mind if we check it out?
But, in the final scene, they discover this ridiculously
large wooden half pipe in the middle of nowhere.
It was especially made for the film,
But a replica today exists today at a
skate facility north of LA.
Wheels of Fire is another skate film from
the late 80s,
and it featured both the Nude Bowl and the
Love Bowl,
but the most lasting scenes
of this video were of Natas Kaupas,
a pioneer of street skating,
transforming his neighborhood into a skatepark.
All of the footage of Natas in that video
was groundbreaking.
People thought, wow, you can skate curbs like
that?
You can skate benches,
you can skate fire hydrants,
like the whole world is skate park now.
So suddenly you didn't need to be in California
or in the Arizona desert or in,
you know, or in Florida anymore.
You could be anywhere.
Which brings us to this fire hydrant in Venice,
CA.
In 1989, Natas Kaupas did a 720 degree spin
on it.
It's just a perfect scenario, too,
because there’s a pole next to it,
so he kind of can push off and start himself
spinning.
And also brace himself as he comes off.
Doesn't make it any easier.
The move became so iconic
the trick is now called the Natas Spin.
If you look at skateboard magazine covers
from the 60s through the 90s
one thing will quickly become clear -
Skateboarding’s biggest spots
went from pools and pipes, to street spots.
Namely giant stair sets and ledges.
And there’s one plaza that was the center
of it all:
The Embarcadero in San Francisco.
It was a famous skate spot because of all
the surroundings.
There were all these ledges
and different features that you could skate
around.
And that was the hub of skating in San Francisco.
And there was one specific spot
that became notorious because
another pioneering street skater,
Mark Gonzales,
ollied it.
It’s no longer there,
but here it is captured in a Thrasher Magazine
feature
called Spot Check.
The gap itself was something that you
wouldn't have seen necessarily as a challenge.
I think a lot of people that came there never
even
realized the potential until Gonz got there
and jumped it.
This footage shows just how big the gap was
and the only way to cross was gaining a
massive amount of speed,
launching into the air,
and somehow keeping the skateboard right under
your feet.
Rightfully, the spot was dubbed the Gonz Gap,
and quickly became a hub for serious skaters.
It's both a place and a moment and a skater.
It’s when Gonz did that particular move.
Yeah, you don’t mess around with the Gonz
Gap.
If there’s one thing that hasn’t changed
in the 60 years of skateboarding,
it’s that school campuses often have the
best skate spots.
In Video Days, 1991’s milestone skate film
directed by a young Spike Jonze,
Mark Gonzales grinds a bench at Kenter Canyon
Elementary
And in another scene,
ollies a short but incredibly deep set of
four ledges
at Wallenberg high school in San Francisco.
Over the years, skaters have
proved their worth by landing more
and more complicated tricks at Wallenberg.
Another famous school spot is Hollywood High
16 stair,
which is the most geotagged location on
campus.
And then there’s El Toro,
a 20-stair set that has tormented skaters
since Transworld Skateboarding published this
image
of Heath Kirchart board-sliding the center rail.
The rail no longer exists,
but that hasn’t stopped anyone from hurling
themselves down the empty stairs.
But, perhaps the most iconic location
is one that’s no longer there:
The Carlsbad Gap.
It’s a parking lot now,
but scroll back a few years on Google Earth
and you’ll see it.
There is a set of stairs that goes from
one level to another at the school yard.
And then next to it was a patch of grass,
and the grass went down at the same angle
as the stairs,
for the most part, but it was actually a little
bit less steep.
And then there was just a wall drop off at
the end.
If you're jumping the gap, you have to clear
this higher part,
and that means you have to go much faster,
and go actually much further.
If you could do a trick down the stairs,
that's one thing.
If you do a trick over the gap?
That's a totally different thing.
I’ve watched and rewatched skaters attempt
to
land tricks at these spots over and over and
over,
and I realized that the truly exhilarating
moments
happen only after the skateboarder
has failed 100 hundred times.
When Chris Cole did a 360 flip at Wallenberg,
it was incredibly impressive.
But the footage that became even more iconic
is a compilation of him crashing and again.
So when somebody in a video part,
you see them, you know, failing five times,
10 times, 15 times, 20 times,
and then finally getting it,
what matters is as much all of the failed
attempts
as the final thing.
One of the biggest moments in skateboarding
history was a fail.
It happened when Jamie Thomas broke his board
trying to land an 18 foot drop
at a high school in southern California.
He didn’t land it, but the spot earned the
name The Leap of Faith.
It's places where people have invested blood,
sweat and tears, literally.
People can get extremely impassioned
about them
and feel a sense of loss when they go.
And I think what skateboarding's
always been good at,
is it tests our idea of what we want public
space to be.
Whether it’s at the Southbank in London,
the ledges at the Museum of Contemporary Art
in Barcelona,
The Warschauer benches in Berlin,
or a 25-foot stair set in Lyon...
Skateboarders, I think, are a constant reminder
that our cities can be creative and rich places.
