![]() ![]() Plan on building a strong foundation to support a heavy concrete skate ramp. Clear the ground for your ramp’s location.The ramp’s dimensions will help you determine how much concrete you’ll need. What type of slope or shape do you want in the ramp? Use draft paper to plan your ramp. Decide what type of concrete skate ramp you want.How do you build a concrete skate ramp? Here are nine steps to get you rolling along. But a concrete skate ramp will always lead to the best kickflips, flip tricks, heelflips, ollies, fakies, goofyfoots and tailslides.įor the unenlightened, those are skateboard moves, and while wood ramps may make cool rolling noises, concrete provides unbeatable stability and precision. You may want to reduce the length of the flat to 6 rather than 8 feet too otherwise the smaller transition might not give you enough speed over 8 feet of flat to do tricks.The rain may come. The basic plan is the same as a 4 foot ramp (same transition) just cut it off at 2 feet high. I can tell you a 2 foot high mini ramp is just as fun and costs less to make. If you are contemplating building a backyard ramp but a 4 foot high ramp looks a little too big. If you want something a little wider the following video from shows how to build a 12 foot wide mini ramp and has a few extra tips for perfect transition templates and improved ramp surfaces. just build another next to it and bolt them together for 16 feet of perfect mini ramp! The great thing about this ramp is that it's modular, so you can store it away or move it if you need to. You'll need thick PVC so it doesn't break and/or you can fill it solid with sand for extra support (and cap the ends). This ramp uses PVC pipe for coping, which tends to be more slippery compared to metal but does reduce the noise of the ramp overall. It's enough room to skate but you're going to wish it was wider once you progress into slides, grinds and ollies above the coping. I would suggest 8 feet wide is the absolute minimum width for a 4 foot high mini. The first video is by and shows how to build an 8 foot wide mini ramp. Consider some kind of privacy screen if this can't be avoided.) Plus it usually sits below fence height (Tip: try not to locate your ramp near any back fence that going to disrupt your neighbors privacy. This height of ramp is great for a backyard because it's a good size for beginners to learn and still a lot of fun for even the most advanced skaters. I came across two fairly old videos that show how to build 4 foot high mini ramps properly. this post is as much for me (reminiscing) as for anyone else contemplating building a mini ramp in their backyard. We didn't stop being friends but it was the ramp that brought us together.Īt this point I have to say this post is not sponsored. When I eventually had to pull down my mini ramp, our group gradually drifted apart. and make no mistake, it is the ramp that's bringing you all together. Ultimately a backyard ramp is a great place for you and your extended group of skate friends to hang out and share a common love of skateboarding. That doesn't seem to happen in today's public skateparks. Back in the day, even at skateparks, if you were on any kind of mini ramp there seemed to be an unwritten rule that you look out for anyone wanting to skate it, and make sure they got a fair turn - people rarely monopolized the ramp for themselves. You control who skates it and everyone always gets a fair turn. The main benefit of having your own backyard ramp is the community that springs up around it. I can't begin to tell you how good it was to have a home ramp to practice on through the week and then take your tricks onto bigger ramps at the skatepark on the weekends. If you couldn't build something like this yourself, your next option was a road trip to one of the few private skateparks that existed (In Perth, Western Australia, that was The Edge Skatepark for us). Back in the 1990's there wasn't a public skatepark in almost every suburb, so this ramp was pretty special. It's not a hard structure to just plan as you go.ĭespite the surface growing increasingly sketchy due to wear and tear and the elements it was a solid ramp that my friends and I skated every day we could. I used to draw transition templates free hand and just eyeball it until it looked right to me. It probably had a 6 foot transition but I can't be sure. It started out as a 16 foot wide, 4 foot high, 30 foot long mini, to which I later added 1 foot extensions. The crowning glory of all the ramps I built was my backyard mini (pictured), which I've written about before in this blog. Though I had plenty of help building because what skater doesn't want to help a new skate ramp get built as quickly as possible? Back in the day I designed and built the majority of the skateboard ramps my friends and I skated at our house. ![]()
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