
BENNINGTON SKATEPARK
Completed in July 2025, the Bennington Skatepark is a cast-in-place concrete facility designed and built by Grindline in partnership with the Town of Bennington and the local skate community. The park establishes a permanent home for skateboarding in southern Vermont, blending modern transition terrain with thoughtfully integrated street features. By weaving local heritage into a modern, durable design, the park carries forward Bennington’s skateboarding legacy while providing an inclusive public space in the heart of downtown.

KJ GARDNER SKATEPARK
The 19,000-square-foot KJ Gardner Skatepark replaces the city’s worn 2007 modular park with a world-class concrete facility designed by Grindline Skateparks. Funded through a $1.75 million partnership of city, county, and state support—sparked by a $25,000 grant from Council member Reagan Dunn, the park features the world’s first fully integrated concrete pump track. Seamlessly woven into the design, it connects street, bowl, and transition terrain into endless flowing lines. This groundbreaking layout welcomes all wheeled users and sets a new global benchmark for inclusivity and progression. The park opened in July 2025, marking Black Diamond as the birthplace of a new era in skatepark design.

WILKESON, WASHINGTON
Completed in 2021, the Bacon & Eggs Skatepark in Wilkeson, Washington is a fully skateable work of public art brought to life through a collaboration between local artist John Hilding, the Town of Wilkeson, and Grindline Skateparks. Originally conceived as a playful intersection of art and skateboarding, the project evolved into a bold, functional landscape where sculpture and movement are fully integrated.