Brooklyn Banks: A Retrospective
8/13/2020
Chad Muska frontside flips during the Shorty's era. One-two, one-two Photo: Burnett
Designed by M. Paul Friedberg and constructed in 1972, the Brooklyn Bridge Banks became the epicenter of NYC Skateboarding from 1985 until the late 1990s. As the eventual main meet-up spot for skaters Downtown (Washington Square Park was the first), the small banks (between Park Row and Rose Street) and the big banks (between Rose and Pearl Streets) was a place that allowed skaters free reign where you could basically do whatever you wanted. Ironically, it was right next to the main police headquarters at police plaza but because it was hidden by large walls and off ramps on one side and the bridge on the other. It was a hidden urban valley where anything went. During these years anyone and everyone had to skate The Banks. For the locals it was their skatepark and for out-of-towners it was the first place to go when you visited the city. It was the warm-up spot before there was a warm-up spot and most days you would end up staying there the whole day because it had everything—from the small banks, granite curbs, a nine-stair with a rail, granite ledges, big banks, different-height wallrides, a ten stair (backside for goofy footers) and the big 13-stair rails and steps that Jamie Thomas 50-50d at the end of his famous Banks line. And just when you thought everything had been done there you would see footage or a photo of something done on a part that you never even knew about or thought was possible to skate—like when Quim Cardona blasted a frontside grab out of the bank to wall on the Frankfort Street side of The Banks. —Steve Rodriguez
With the Twin Towers looming, a young Keith Hufnagel tosses a varial flip over the wall at the Brooklyn Banks contest–April 18th, 1993 Photo: Wallacavage
Todd Laffler, Matt Wood, Mike Vallely and Rod Smith behold the boy king Sean Sheffey, 1989 Photo: Thomas
The Brooklyn Banks are not in Brooklyn. It was a spot that we always took for granted and they’re not easy to skate. It’s rough and dirty and you don’t want to fall or wear a crispy white shirt there. When you are rolling around on those bricks you can’t help but feel the history of the place. —RB Umali
Left: Block films while Billy Waldman and Chris Pastras look nervous Photo: Thatcher
Right: Wallflowers Coco Santiago and Rod Smith Photo: Thomas
One of the greatest skate photos of all time–Harold Hunter flyin'! Photo: Thatcher
By the mid ’80s, Downtown Manhattan and The Brooklyn Banks were crawling with skaters and derelicts. I can tell you from personal experience it was a killer scene to be a part of! —Rodney Smith
Mike V snaps high on some early SMA-Rocco wood Photos: Thomas
BANKS FOR THE MEMORIES
My first and favorite memory of the spot was secretly following Harry Jumonji and Ian Frahm from Soho Skates to The Banks. Before that I didn’t even know they existed. I kept about a block back and lost them as they bombed down the hill on Park Row. They had made the sharp right into The Banks area which I saw for the first time as I came to a stop at the bottom of the hill. I remember turning my head to the right and seeing Harry do one of those two-wheeled freestyle carves on the edges of his wheels on The Banks. That moment is forever ingrained in my mind and was my introduction to The Banks. My second favorite memory is any session when the Gonz rolled up! —Steve Rodriguez
Left: O'Dell's favorite photo. Mike Kepper blasts off Photo: Thomas
Right: Harry Jumonji, freaky two-wheel styley Photo: Thomas
Hosoi hops the barrier before noses were a big thing Photo: Thatcher
We were skating from the small banks to the big banks and out of nowhere Natas hops up the curb to skate with us. He did a demo in Long Island the day before but it was a pleasant surprise to see him unexpectedly. Natas, he was so big then, we all loved him. —Gino Iannucci
Left: Jeremy Henderson. Oct, 1989
Center: Jeff Pang. Feb, 1993
Right: Chad Muska. Oct, 1995
My favorite story has got to be assisting Stacy Peralta, Craig Stecyk III and Mike Vallely at The Banks on a filming session for Public Domain. Mike and I skated The Banks and Stacy and Craig filmed and directed. Mike, as always, shredded with a vengeance and it was fucking hot that day. Before the video hit the shelves, Mike told me that there was a cameo section of me. Though I was forever not the skater trying to throw my face in front of a photographer, I can’t lie—I was stoked for that hook up! —Rodney Smith
A pint-sized Javier Nunez flicks a fakie flip in 1993. He wouldn’t be little for long Photo: Wallacavage
If it wasn’t for The Banks, a lot of people would not have their career started in skateboarding. That place was more than a skate spot, it was a place where a lot of kids from broken homes and different walks of life could go and forget about all those things and just skateboard collectively. No matter who you were, where you from, what race you were, it was a place where everybody would meet and forget everything else that was going on in life. —Javier Nunez
Harold Hunter was a Banks killer. Pop shove, early 90s Photos: Elmuts
Left: Line up: Jeff Pang, Kyle James, and Erf Photo: Stones
Right: Leo Fitzpatrick, early-90s gold! Photo: Stones
That contest in 1993 was insane. Watching Harold Hunter win $1,000—that was a lot of money in those days! He did a backside heelflip over the wall in a Jersey Devils hockey jersey. They killed a rat! That was a big thing. It was a wild day. —Quim Cardona
Featured in the first 411, the contest in Spring ’93 introduced skaters around the world to the Banks—dead rats, tagging and all. Jahmal Williams varial flips above the ruckus Photo: Wallacavage
PROTECT YA NECKThe wildest thing I ever saw at The Banks was during one of those epic contest weekends. It seemed like there were 1,000 skaters at this particular contest and no air to breathe in sight. All of a sudden this scrappy dude walked right up the middle of the action during someone’s contest run. Needless to say, the heckling started. The scrappy dude stopped and started yelling shit at the skaters and as we know when skaters are grouped together and doing their thing, interruptions are not welcome. Within seconds, 20 skaters rushed this dude and suddenly he pulled out a gun, pointed it at everyone while moving in a circle and waving the gun from side to side yelling, “What y’all gonna do?!” I’ve never in my life witnessed a crowd of people flee a scene like that! Practically every person there ran and skated away for their lives. I didn’t run. I just sat on The Banks wall. I “shit a brick” for a moment, didn’t move, nor did I look directly at the dude and he eventually ran off adding no casualties to his list. —Rodney Smith
Another epic contest weekend, 1993 Photo: Wallacavage
My first session there as a teenager was with Steve Rodriguez who warned me about board jackers. “Don’t worry about getting jacked; just don’t stop skating.” Sure enough I witnessed someone’s board getting snatched and a fight between two brothers who skated. Maurice Key’s famous line on Rose Street where he almost gets run over by a car is probably the wildest thing I ever filmed there. —RB Umali
Left: Pop redefined. Quim Cardona, fakie ollie Photo: Elyashkevich
Right: Babes at the Banks? It happened Photo: Wallacavage
There was a time when there were freestylers down there. We’d sit and watch. There were breakdancers. The Banks was like a free zone for self-expression. It was out of the traffic; it was a quiet place for New York City. The only reason my mom let us skate there was because we had a gang of older guys around to make sure we were alright. Nothing ever happened, bro. Even with the biggest crowds, everyone looked out. We’d always stick up for each other. Nobody ever got hurt, unless you got hurt on your skateboard. —Quim Cardona
Froston, backside flip Photo: Wallacavage
BEST OF THE BESTI had attempted to ollie the fence a day or two before and almost impaled myself. I went back to my parents’ home in New Jersey and had nightmares about it. But I woke up resolved to do it; I just believed it had to happen and that I had to do it. I called Reda and told him to meet me there. They built that fence to stop us from skating the banks, from launching into the street, but I felt that I, that skateboarding had gotten the last word, that the chapter was closed properly. Soon after that, the upper banks were made completely unskatable. —Mike Vallely
Check the knob flying in frame seven! Mike V has always been tough as nails Photo: Reda
I was skating with Jamie Thomas the day he filmed that epic marathon line in the Zero video. He was skating the rail and he kinda pushed me to grind it, too. Dimitry got the picture. He just showed up and we were sessioning the rail together. Then, right after I grinded it, he delivered the craziest line that nobody will ever match! People still talk about it to this day. —Quim Cardona
We'd rather see Gino kickflip back tail Photo: Reda
Danny Way nosesliding the rail riding away with a snapped tail. Me and Kareem having a good session filming for Trilogy, that stands out, too. —Gino Iannucci
Show-stopper Danny Way while the East Coast looks on Photo: Wallacavage
History remembers him as one of the hardest ripping. Keenan Forever Photo: Elyaskevich
The hardest ripping skaters at The Banks? Damn! There are so many to mention, yet I’ll give it a go. In my mind the top would likely have to be Christian Hosoi, the Gonz, Mike V, Huf, Keenan Milton, Chris Reily, every rider on the Shut Skates and Zoo York teams, Kyle James (in Timberland boots), Jeremy Henderson, Harry Jumonji, Ian Frahm and Pepe Torres, just to name a few. —Rodney Smith
The first time I saw Jason Lee, I went to The Banks by myself and he was there with two other people. The ad with him doing a tré flip had just come out. At that time people couldn’t fathom doing that trick, but Jason pushed as fast as he could on the uphill to hit the hip of the little banks and blasted one of the biggest tré flips I’ve ever seen—first try! When I saw this firsthand, it was life-changing. —Jeff Pang
As far as Baker-makers, this back noseblunt by Trainwreck might be the best Photo: Atiba
Kyle James could do any trick on the bank wearing Timberland boots while riding anyone’s board. So many people have killed The Banks over the years, but no one did it like Kyle James! —Rodney Torres
Freddy and Kalis eye the lines Photo: Atiba
There were so many eras, but to me no one skated The Banks better than Harry Jumonji in the mid ’80s. His style was insane and his pop was second to none. Other standouts at that time that I witnessed were Chris Reily, Harold Hunter, Bruno Musso and Jeremy Henderson. From the ’90s era I’d say the Cardona brothers (RIP Mike)—they skated everything at The Banks and made it look so easy. Kyle James, Jamal Simmons, Huf, Mike Kepper and Ivan Perez were other bank destroyers. —Steve Rodriguez
There is no story of The Banks without Harold and vice versa. Switch flip from the Golden Era Photo: Elyaskevich
Left: Alien Dill, feeble the racks Photo: Reda
Right: The Ghost of Old New York (and Joey Alvarez). Switch flip Photo: Elyaskevich
The wildest thing I ever saw was Ben Kadow doing the handrail first try, no warm up. And Hosoi ollieing the wall in Insane Terrain, but I wasn’t there. —Mark Gonzales
When it comes to the best, Huf, Quim, Jefferson Pang, Loki, Ryan Hickey and Kyle James are the first names that come to mind. Quim’s nollie varial flip and Javier Nunez’ switch flip over the wall are my favorite standout tricks. —RB Umali
Left: Willy Akers, modern moves, 2006 Photo: Cronan
Right: Mike Cardona, RIP Photo: Reda
In 2017 I skated there with Mark Gonzales for some double actions in the rain. It may be my favorite moment ever skating there, or in skating period. —Mike Vallely
Mike V and Gonz, rust never sleeps Photo: Wallace
Most memorable session was after the Skate NYC contest. Mike Ternasky, Brian Tucci and Brian Lotti followed us to The Banks and we skated with those guys. Tuccis’ footage in Hokus Pokus was from that day —Matt Bell
If I have to pick just one person I would say Keith Hufnagel skated The Banks the best. He hit parts of the banks no one hit, always had epic footage and photos there and he grew up in the city. Also Jeff Pang—can’t leave him out. Then you had later generations come and crush the place like Wenning and of course Zered. Some standout tricks to me would be a photo I’ve seen of Steve Olson carving the small banks looking all stylish and epic probably from 1981, Mike V ollieing the fence, Jaime Reyes front boarding the rail and Rob Welsh switch 360 flipping the wall. But maybe I’m biased since I shot them. Ishod at Back to the Banks just doing so many tricks over the rail next to the big banks was epic! —Giovanni Reda
Jaime Reyes, 20 years before the Skate Kitchen Photo: Reda
THE END? To lose the The Banks would be to lose the heart of NY skateboarding. Everything else besides the fountain in Flushing and the Con Ed banks are gone! And this was THE meet up spot for so long, the culture and history that came out of it shaped East Coast skateboarding to what it is today! —Steve Rodriguez
Controlling the mayhem, Steve Rodriguez Photo: Morf
As a parent now, I would want to bring my son to The Banks when he gets older and say, “Look, we skated at this place. This is where my best times were in life.” You want to keep that going for the new generation of kids. We don’t want to see that spot gone, and then they build another fucking skatepark. —Javier Nunez
The Stormin Mormon Josh Maready rocks to fakie Photo: O'Dell
Dr. Z, switch crooks into the future, 2009 Photo: Reda
Crailtap? Nah, Rick Howard goes for the Crail snatch
The loss of The Banks would spell another strike out for the skateboard community. There have been two outlaw skaters who have gone up against the establishments of New York city government in the defense of skateboarding, and those two are Andy Kessler (RIP) and Steve Rodriguez. For Steve, I think, the longtime fight to save The Brooklyn Banks has been his toughest battle and it isn’t over yet. Let’s support from afar and support in person if possible to make something happen. —Rodney Smith
Photo: Morf
The New York of old is now a gentrified Disney town but The Banks is still a dirty, grimy corner of the city that skateboarders could call their own. No smooth softball court can replace the significance of what The Banks have contributed to this city and the global skateboard community. The loss of The Banks would forever change what NYC skateboarding is. —Jeff Pang
From Ian Frahm’s layback rock to Antwuan Dixon’s switch frontside flip, The Banks have seen it all. If you were able to skate there, remember the sound of those bricks beneath your wheels and count yourself lucky Sequence: Atiba
Please sign the petition to SAVE THE BROOKLYN BANKS at Change.ORG
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