Mobile skate tour for downtown Kingston this weekend

KINGSTON, Jamaica – A transformative urban culture initiative is set to roll across Jamaica as the Jamaica Skate Culture Foundation (JSC) launches its national skateboarding tour with a three-day inaugural event in downtown Kingston from December 19-21.

The groundbreaking event will commence at 10:00 AM on Water Lane, featuring an innovative mobile skate park installation designed to provide structured, safety-equipped skateboarding activities at no cost to participants. With particular emphasis on engaging inner-city youth, the program aims to democratize access to recreational sports while fostering community development.

Friday and Saturday programming will specifically target young residents from urban neighborhoods, offering beginner-level skateboarding initiation sessions, supervised group activities with comprehensive protective gear, skate demonstrations, and street art workshops. The initiative takes an interdisciplinary approach to youth engagement through urban culture.

On Sunday, the mobile skate park will integrate with Kingston Creative’s Grand Market – one of the city’s premier cultural events – by installing the facility at the intersection of Church Street and Water Lane. This strategic placement positions skateboarding within a broader creative ecosystem during the market hours.

The Sunday schedule from 1:00 PM to 2:30 PM will feature an institutional ceremony attended by distinguished representatives including Kevin Brown, President of the University of Technology, Jamaica (home to the Corporate Area’s sole skate club), alongside diplomatic officials from France and Germany.

This Kingston launch initiates a nationwide tour continuing through 2026, with planned expansions to Portmore, Ocho Rios, Port Antonio, Montego Bay, Negril, Mandeville, and Treasure Beach.

Established in 2020 as a registered charitable organization, the Jamaica Skate Culture Foundation employs skateboarding and urban culture as vehicles for youth development, educational advancement, social inclusion, and violence prevention. The foundation has secured international support, with France funding initial skate park development and instructor training, while Germany enables national mobility through support of the mobile facility.

Beyond immediate youth engagement, the tour serves as an advocacy platform encouraging municipal governments and institutions to invest in permanent public skate parks as sustainable infrastructure for community development. According to foundation founder Remy Walter, the initiative operates ‘at the intersection of sport, education, culture, and social impact’ through international partnerships aimed at building ‘a better Jamaica.’