TOP 10 FACTS
Learn about the plan to pour concrete for a regional-scale, mostly concrete skate facility on historic green Mount Prospect Park!
* Multi-millions of our public money
* No community site consultation
* Safety and traffic problems
* Undermines climate, green, resiliency goals
1. Don’t pave green park space in a worsening climate crisis! This plan goes against officials’ green climate pledges, policies, reports and community surveys. Community Board 9 voted against it as “bad public policy” – while welcoming skate construction “with open arms” on already-paved space. Facing record-breaking heat, drought, and urban parks catching fire, we deserve the best decision-making – and we owe it to our kids. Construction over root systems endangers decades-old shade trees, critical tree canopy the City is supposed to protect and preserve. Thousands of park-lovers and numerous climate, skateboard, neighborhood and historical organizations oppose the construction on Mount Prospect Park.
2. Needless conflict. Fix nearby skate spaces, and build on already-paved spaces! We shouldn't have to choose between green space or skate space – officials have manufactured community conflict. NYC Parks stats show Brooklyn has more than 40% of the City’s skate spaces already. Many nearby already-paved skate spaces languish for lack of features, upkeep, or funding. Click here for just a few examples.
3. It’s public money! Over $11M — signed off by Mayor Eric Adams and continued by Mayor Zohran Mamdani, ex-Council Member Brad Lander, Council Members Crystal Hudson and Shahana Hanif, and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The PR campaign gives lots of people the impression California megamillionaire Tony Hawk is paying for it; he's not. Hawk’s foundation is donating design ideas – and gets prominent signage and branding.
4. Another environmental point: congestion, traffic, parking The facility is a regional-scale sports complex that would be jammed into an area already filled with tourist attractions, activities and events.
5. “Bored kids need something to do” This is a “talking point” that doesn’t make sense in an area filled with recreational resources. And the plan is not family neighborhood-friendly. The Public Skatepark Development Guide California skater Tony Hawk helped produce (https://publicskateparkguide.org/vision/types-of-skateparks/) says, "Regional skateparks, due to their size, present unique challenges. Smaller, neighborhood skateparks support a cadre of regular park visitors that form a micro-community. Regional skateparks don’t do this as well because they are typically managed as showcase parks. The high degree of ownership and involvement by the managing agency can mitigate unwanted behavior at the facility, but it can also dissuade natural stewardship by the regular patrons. Regional skateparks tend to lack the “community spirit” that smaller facilities possess."
6. Safety problems particular to Mount Prospect Park The site violates Hawk’s Skatepark Project’s own guidelines that emphasize clear sightlines from the street through a skate facility, “to minimize antisocial behavior” and avert “significant delinquency” — based on information they collected from police. But Mount Prospect Park is secluded, set on a steep, wooded hill – with no sightlines from the street. And there are other safety problems with the site, like the danger of skaters “hill bombing” down the park’s slopes and ramp entrance into people with strollers, mobility aids, walking dogs – and then into the busy Brooklyn Botanic Garden entrance, and traffic on Eastern Parkway. The steep granite steps and rails at the second entrance also empty into Eastern Parkway traffic. And Mount Prospect Park is full of decades-old oak trees that shed thousands of acorns — dangerous “stop rocks” and “danger pebbles” that send skaters flying when a wheel hits.
7. No community site consultation!
8. Environmental Equity City Council District 39, including Park Slope and some other areas, voted initial funding for a skate facility during its 2021 Participatory Budgeting process -- a program advertised as "direct democracy" to advance the choices of a particular participating district. But Mount Prospect Park lies within the boundaries of District 35 — including Prospect Heights and a substantial portion of Crown Heights. Most recent Census figures, reported by TheCity, indicate District 39 (the voting district) is 6% Black. Yet the facility has been sited in District 35, which TheCity's Census breakdown reports is 35% Black. District 35 had no opportunity to vote on the project, and would lose natural green "cooling island" space for this construction. Environmental health studies and organizations such as WE ACT for Environmental Justice spotlight these types of recurrent inequities.
9. Don’t pave over historic green park space!Mount Prospect Park is officially eligible for the National Register of Historic Places, as a preserved WPA-era park especially designed for “quiet recreation,” between the library and botanic garden. It still serves that key purpose for everyone — including for our elders, our very youngest, and people with disabilities (including neurodiverse people).
10. Limits how people now enjoy the park The design consumes the central lawn “heart of the park and puts it behind barriers. The paving alone is more than 4 pro basketball courts. It takes over green, free, flexible space now open to all, paving most of it for a narrow band of specialized uses that require purchasing equipment. It will inhibit current uses of the park. For example, dogs by instinct commonly react with stress or aggression to skateboard visuals and vibrations. The design takes away playing fields daycares and school groups and summer camps and soccer players now share for flexible use.
If we need more skate space, build on already-paved areas –
and make this a project where everybody wins!
For more info, and to sign the petition and get updates, visit www.FriendsofMountProspectPark.org