North

Grab your boards, the Carcross skate park is now open

Kids asked for the skate park for more than 20 years, and on Saturday, the Carcross/Tagish First Nation finally celebrated the grand opening of their community skate park.

For more than 20 years, local kids dreamed of having a halfpipe of their own

Close to a hundred people of all ages turned out to celebrate the grand opening of the skate park on Saturday. (Alexandra Byers/CBC)

Corinne Carvill remembers hearing kids talk about building a skate park on the hill behind the RCMP in Carcross more than 20 years ago.

Those kids are now adults, some with children of their own, and on Saturday they joined close to 100 people to celebrate the grand opening of the Carcross skate park.

"It's a beautiful thing," said Carvill, the career manager for Carcross/Tagish First Nation (CTFN).

The skate park features a variety of ramps and rails, a halfpipe, a bowl and a pump track.

CTFN Elder Winnie Atlin gave the park its Tlingit name: Yaan at l'oon gooch, which means "look out hill." Visitors and skaters have a perfect view out over town, all the way to the mountains that encircle the community. 

The Carcross skate park features multiple ramps and rails, a halfpipe, a bowl and a pump track. (Alexandra Byers/CBC)

'It's just amazing'

On hand to celebrate the opening was a number of skaters and BMX riders from Whitehorse's Skate for Life Alliance. Kids of all ages registered for clinics with the pros, learning everything from how to improve on the basics, to mastering the latest trick.

"It's just amazing to see this come to fruition," said CTFN Chief Andy Carvill during his welcome speech to the crowd.

The project is the result of years of collaboration between the First Nation, the local advisory council, the Yukon government and the Canadian Northern Economic Development Agency (CanNor).

The park cost just under $450,000, with the majority coming from CTFN and CanNor, and additional funding from the territorial government and the Carcross Recreation Board.

CTFN Chief Andy Carvill, Minister of Community Services John Streicker, CTFN Career Manager Corinne Carvill, Local Advisory Chair Colleen James, and CTFN Director of Capacity Susannah Beckett were part of the effort to bring the project to life. (Alexandra Byers/CBC)

The CTFN Land Management Board donated the land. Local Whitehorse businesses donated skateboards, scooters, protective gear and a BMX bike, all of which can be signed out from the Carcross Learning Centre to use in the park.

But Chief Carvill made sure to emphasize the idea came from, and was completed, by the people of the community.

'Leave your mark'

CTFN citizens designed the park's logo and other art, and local youth were heavily involved in the design and construction of the park over the summer.

"They were really quite passionate about being out here and getting the art done," said Susannah Beckett, the capacity director for CTFN. 

It's up to you to decide what will make your community great.- Sierra Van der Meer, Regional director of CanNor

Facilities like this "make people healthier. They give youth and children an outlet to be able to spend their time," said Sierra Van der Meer, the regional director for CanNor.

"This is your park now," she said to the youth in the crowd on Saturday. "It's up to you to decide what will make your community great."

Chief Carvill invited everyone to pick up a can of spray paint and cover the concrete bowl in art and graffiti.

"Make it your park, your design," he said. "Leave your mark."

Everyone had a chance to spray paint graffiti and art on the bowl of the new skate park. (Alexandra Byers/CBC)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Alexandra Byers is an award-winning journalist with CBC North in Whitehorse. Before she moved to Yukon, she freelanced as a journalist and videographer in Uganda. Prior to that she produced investigative and breaking news with the CBC News Investigative Unit and CBC News Network in Toronto.