Search

Duty Now For the Future Retrospective – Tim Payne

DUTY NOW FOR THE FUTURE RETROSPECTIVE

TIM PAYNE

INTERVIEW BY JIM MURPHY

PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHER MCENIRY

We started the Duty Now for the Future articles to honor those skateboarders building concrete for other skateboarders. These skaters are dedicated to building skate structures, day in and day out, where quality is job one and money doesn’t matter as much as the finished product. They are the ones carving the future for generations to come and we want to bring their stories to you in order to understand what goes into building those killer parks that you get to ride! We want to thank these skaters for all their sweat, hard work and dedication to skateboarding! They’re not afraid to lay yards of pool coping down, so get out there and grind it up!!! That is our Duty Now For The Future! D-E-V-O. We dedicate our Duty Now For the Future Retrospective to Bob 2 aka Bob Casale. R.I.P.

What is your favorite backyard/DIY spot to skate?

Well, my backyard was until I moved last year. I had a 24’ wide mini ramp that morphed into a 100’ x 24’ wide ramp that had the 24’ wide mini, which transferred over into a bank with ledges and movable obstacles that waterfalled down into a vert wall. The only thing wrong with it is that it’s 100’ wide the wrong way.

Who is the one person that influenced you the most in building skateparks?

There was never just one person. I have a few… Captain Kirk, Frank Hawk and the man above.

What’s your favorite skatepark now?

We are building it this year (Breckenridge, CO). This park will have almost everything I like about skating put into it, a big bowl with good hips, mid-bowl with tile and pool coping all the way around, 250-foot long street course that flows and also a mid-size snake run.

What do you think has been the biggest innovation in skatepark building over the years?

The thought process and the Design/Build mentality. Finally, cities all over are recognizing two things. First off, they are seeing the importance of Design/Build and, secondly, they are realizing that skateparks are works of art and not just a sterile white concrete environment. We are the first company to do a lot of things that have become industry standards now like colored concrete and granite/marble ledges to name a few.

Where do you see park building going in the next ten years? Do you see skatepark building as a long-term trend?

Yes. Skateparks have now become a standard recreational item with city planning and I think the future looks bright as long as the parks are built in good areas and are unfenced and unsupervised! That’s the biggest bag of suck is when a city puts in the pad nannies to watch over us. It’s proven that skateparks are used more and provide a healthier environment when they are located properly. Skateparks that are fenced and supervised are mostly used by the beginner kids and the really good skaters will never step foot in the park for many reasons!

What innovations have happened in skatepark building that have become obsolete and aren’t being built right now?

The mass 100 hundred yards and over pours that the old concrete companies used to do. They would just bulldoze some mounds and sling some concrete over it and call it a skatepark. Great skateparks are built with precision and great thought in the planning and, in the field. Without both of these things, the end product will suffer.

What is your favorite pool shape and why?

I skated a few big amoebas in big hotels and condos back in the day that were interesting, but I tell you my mind always goes back to the golf course pool that Dave Warren took me to across the bay in San Francisco! This was a closed golf course country club pool and it was big! It was a big egg bowl that was maybe 4 feet in the shallow with a 9-foot deep end and it had the mellowest waterfall because of its length, with a pinched deep end with a 10-foot radius in the deep end. The side walls were big, so you got these really long swooping lines that you could blast airs and easily grind every inch of coping, even over the stairs. It was almost as if the pool was so perfect that any line you were in never left you in a dead spot. I know I have skated better pools lately, but none that had me feeling like that one! Thank you, Dave, for hooking me up!

“Skateparks are works of art and not just a sterile white concrete environment.”

Favorite pool coping?

We use all Tedder Stone except for some of the special stuff our guys make onsite. The guys on our crew make the best coping ever. James is a mad scientist when it comes to that! Check out the escalators that he and Chris made in Broomfield, CO! All of our guys help with making different molds for all kinds of curbs, ledges and different coping on every job.

What is the one thing that hasn’t been built to skate yet that you’d like to build or see built in the future?

I have two ideas that I’m not letting out of the bag until we get the right circumstance! It’s not just one item. It’s the whole park.

Who is on your crew right now?

Linda Payne, Tito Porrata, James Hedrick, Lance Spiker, Christopher Berry, Curt Baker, Josh Rosenberg, Brett Papini, Joe Fernandez, John Maudsley, Jack Balerud, Tony Walsh, Mike Kruse, Sean Kelly, Joe Storm, Jeff Hammond, Jay Hammond, Jason Ranft, Dave Ellis, Sterling Wright, Kevin Graver, Keith Gibb, Riley Payne and Kevin Perez.

Anyone you want to thank?

All the above for being such team players and getting things done, from all the specialty jobs to the backyard projects to the big city parks. Our guys are making things happen in as many places as they can.

What is your Duty Now for the Future?

Keep on keeping on.

DUTYNOWRETROSPECTIVE-9-10-PAYNE

Follow Us

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Translate »