The Corindi Beach Skatepark features an old street section and a more recently added dope skate bowl. The oblong-shaped skate bowl has consistent transitions, smooth concrete, fantastic drainage, an extension, and familiar steel coping that we love to skate.
The skatepark has been added to and extended over the years to what we now know. Some of the older sections of the park are cracking in areas, although the more recently added features that include the bowl boast seamless transitions with smooth, fast concrete. The street section of the park includes obstacles such as quarters, rails, ledges, banks, humps and bumps.
The skatepark is located next to basketball courts and comes fully equipped with seats, a table, drinking water, rubbish bins, a graph wall and more. The park is beautiful, with well-manicured grass. The graph wall is different; however nice to see and reflects the lack of graffiti on the skatepark. The wall offers a legal area for graffiti artists to paint, which results in the artists doing what they enjoy whilst not being subject to potential criminal damages.
Parrey Skatepark
One of the best private indoor skateparks in Australia, Parrey Skatepark sports a selection of seamless mini ramps with tight transitions and a bunch of larger wooden ramps, quarters, vert walls, spine and much more. The larger section of the park was a little gnarly...
Crescent Head Skatepark
The beautiful coastal town of Crescent Head on the Macleay Valley Coast in NSW is due for a new skatepark. The town is known as a holiday hot spot with gorgeous beaches and great surf. Unfortunately, the skatepark is letting the town down with only three pre-fab...
Byron Bay Skatepark
The new 2.6 million dollar skate facility in Byron Bay has officially opened to skate. The skatepark features two rad bowls, mini ramps with a spine and a comprehensive open-flow street section. The concrete is super smooth, the design is fantastic and the park is...