Vancouver skateboard community longs for indoor space as city policy tries to keep up
VANCOUVER — When parents come into Michelle Pezel’s skateboard shop on Vancouver’s Main Street around Christmas, they often ask where their kids can go to practise.
Pezel, who co-owns Antisocial Skateboard Shop with longtime pro skater Rick McCrank, then has to explain that skateboarding in Vancouver during the rainy winter months is “tough.”
“They get a gift and it’s a skateboard and they can’t really use it that much,” she said.
“It’s dark at 4:30. There are not that many facilities even with lights in our city.”