Clear
66°
Downers Grove, IL
Clear|Forecast »

Villa Park teens just shy of funding goal for BMX-friendly skate park

Villa Park, IL

  Comments (...)
Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

There’s a hole in the fence along the Prairie Path that’s pretty much invisible to people who don’t know it’s there. Slip through this hole and down a hill, and you’ll find a network of bike ramps built from mud and maintained for years by the BMX riders who live nearby.

Teens practicing tricks and jumps literally off the beaten path in the woods sounds dangerous. It probably is, but these dedicated riders are desperate.

There are skate parks in Villa Park, Lombard, Glen Ellyn and Elmhurst, but BMXers complain they are poorly maintained, with cracks in the sidewalks and bad equipment. Many also don’t allow bikes. With nowhere else to go, these young men retreat to their homemade course in the woods.

Getting started
In 2007, Paulina Jimenez, a Villa Park resident and mother of a BMX rider, discovered the lack of community resources for her son and his friends. Joel Anderson, 11, was just getting interested in skating, and Jimenez, who was new to the area, took him to the Villa Park skate park on a recommendation from a neighbor.

“I brought my camera to take pictures of him skating,” she said. “But when we got there, instead of taking pictures of him, I took pictures of the skate park. It was extremely dangerous to skate. I was speechless — it was not what a skate park should be.”

The photos she took that day show deep cracks in the concrete, a broken fence surrounding the complex and a general sense of disarray.

Jimenez didn’t think this was right, so she went online to do some research. She found The Tony Hawk Foundation, an organization that supports the creation of public, community skate parks, and then she got a group together.

From a network of parents, community members, park district leaders, skaters and BMX riders emerged the Villa Park Skate Park Committee, an organization devoted to constructing a well-planned, well-constructed and well-maintained skate park in the community.

Jimenez founded the Villa Park Community Foundation, a nonprofit organization, so they could apply for grants. They received grants from Allstate, the Tony Hawk Foundation and most recently, the Pepsi Refresh Grant.

Previous Page|1||||

Comments

Total Comments
0

View/Add Comments

There have been no comments made about this story.

Add Comments

You must register with a valid email to post comments. Only your member ID will be posted with the comments.

Click here to read the rules for posting comments

 

Registered users sign in here:

*Member ID:
*Password:
  Forgot Your Password?
 

Become a Registered User


Reader Poll

Where's the best place to catch the Blackhawks series?

The local sports bar
My couch
At the game, duh!
Who are the Blackhawks and why should I care?