The famous Shepparton Skatepark, also known as S-CAPE, was opened to the public in 2001. The large concrete skatepark spans over 1,200m2 of smooth concrete with a collection of rails, ramps, transitions, bowls, spines, ledges, banks and much more.
The skatepark was designed by Aspect Designs and constructed by the hard-working team at Convic Skateparks at the cost of 300k. The bill was split between funding from the Department of Sport and Recreation Victoria, the Council and local community contributions.
A smaller beginner street section is barricaded off from the main park with several small rails, banks, ledges and a slappy curb.
The rest of the park has an open-flow layout with many transitions, a couple of spines and almost everything a skater would want.
The Shepparton Skatepark was a game changer over two decades ago when it was initially constructed. The park has tested the tests of time and is still super relevant today and the best skatepark in the area. The concrete is still smooth, with minimal cracks, and the design was revolutionary in its day but is still hard to fault.
Orbost Skatepark
The relatively small Orbost Skatepark is a standard street park with a varying arrangement of quarters and banks at either side, a slappy curb as a feature above a bank, along with the more common street features in the middle of the park. Street features include a...
Heyfield Skatepark
Also commonly referred to as the Heyfield Bowl, The Heyfield Skatepark boasts a super mellow kidney bowl and a small street section with a bunch of modern street obstacles. The skate bowl has a smooth concrete surface and traditional steel coping. The kidney shape...
Toongabbie Skate Park
There are huge steel banks and a quarter that rocket you towards another steel feature obstacle in the middle with a euro gap and rail. There is also a very long and thin steel mini ramp. We suspect it was the first and potentially the last mini ramp they built as it...