Skate Park Equipment
Skate Park Equipment
Skate Park Design and Installation
Every project starts with our free design service. We assess the available footprint, ground conditions, drainage, sightlines and access, then produce CAD skate park designs showing equipment layout, run lines and rider flow. As a supplier rather than a manufacturer, we configure proven kit from leading UK and European skate ramp brands.
To work out what you need, we look at three things: the skill level of the user group (beginner, intermediate, advanced), the riding disciplines (skate, BMX, scooter) and the space available. Our installation team handles the lot, whether that be concrete or tarmac base, modular steel ramp installation, fencing, lighting, signage and surrounding surfacing.
Industries
We supply skate park equipment across four sectors, covering schools, multi-academy trusts, NHS settings, local and parish councils, housing developers, contractors, holiday parks and visitor attractions:
- Education: secondary schools, colleges and youth-focused academies, where compact skate parks support break-time activity and PE provision.
- Government: local authority parks, parish council recreation grounds and youth services.
- Construction: architects, contractors and housing developers fitting out new residential, town centre and mixed-use schemes.
- Commercial: holiday parks, visitor attractions, sports clubs and youth centres.
Skate Park Regulations
Skate park equipment must meet BS EN 14974, the British standard for facilities for users of roller sports equipment in schools, playgrounds and public areas. This regulation covers structural strength, slip resistance, surface finish, transitions, finger and head entrapment, and required clearance zones.
Surfacing under impact zones must also meet BS EN 1177 where applicable. To ensure regulations are met, we complete a post-installation RPII inspection on every project and supply signage covering age suitability, supervision and permitted disciplines.
Project Funding and Support Advice
We provide free funding and support advice for schools, councils and community organisations developing skate parks. Support covers bid writing, evidencing need (often via youth consultation), cost breakdown for grant applications and identifying funders.
Skate parks attract a strong case for youth engagement and anti-social behaviour reduction, which can unlock public health and policing funds alongside standard sport budgets. We support from initial scoping through to phased delivery.
Frequently Asked Questions
We supply skate park ramps (mini ramps, quarter pipes, half pipes), fun boxes, grind rails, ledges, kickers, manual pads, bowls and pump tracks. Everything in our skate park equipment for sale meets BS EN 14974 and is sourced from established UK manufacturers.
Modular skate parks use prefabricated steel or composite ramps fixed to a tarmac or concrete base, which are quicker to install, easier to relocate and lower cost. Concrete skate parks are poured in situ as one continuous form, meaning longer build, higher cost, but quieter in use and the preferred choice for permanent flagship sites.
Skateboarders, BMX riders, scooter users and inline skaters of all ages and skill levels. Most public skate parks are designed for unsupervised use, with signage covering disciplines, ages and any helmet or pad recommendations.
Yes, modular skate park equipment is regularly installed in secondary schools, recreation grounds, public parks and housing schemes. Site selection should account for noise, access and proximity to housing, all of which we cover at the design stage.
A modular skate park typically ranges from £15,000 for a small starter setup to £150,000+ for a comprehensive community facility, depending on size, equipment and groundworks. Poured concrete schemes generally start higher (£60,000+) and scale to several hundred thousand pounds for flagship parks.
Usually yes, most local authorities classify a skate park as a change of use or new structure requiring planning consent. Permitted development may apply to very small modular schemes within existing recreation grounds, but we recommend a pre-application enquiry with the planning authority.
Most modular skate parks take three to six weeks on site, depending on size, base preparation and surfacing. Larger schemes or those combined with concrete elements can run eight to twelve weeks.