Embarcadero, MACBA, Sants: Global Skateboarding Loses Three of Its Most Sacred Spots Simultaneously

There are spots. And then there are SACRED PLACES. Places where skateboarding mutated, evolved, where tricks were invented for the first time in history. In March 2026, three of them are disappearing simultaneously. And it’s a goddamn cultural earthquake.
The Embarcadero — Where It All Began
San Francisco. The Vaillancourt Fountain. 1971. This raw concrete monster by Armand Vaillancourt, planted in Embarcadero Plaza, wasn’t supposed to become the cradle of modern street skateboarding. But that’s exactly what happened.
Karl Watson said it best: « Modern-day street skating was actually developed here at the Embarcadero. » That concave wall everyone calls « the wave » — that’s where riders invented tricks that didn’t exist anywhere else. The spot shaped an entire generation of SF skaters in the 90s.
And now? The city voted for its demolition. Structural deterioration, lead, asbestos. The appeal to delay the work was rejected by the Board of Supervisors in January 2026. The pieces will go into storage, with no future plans.
We’re not just losing a fountain. We’re losing the birthplace of a discipline.
MACBA — End of a 30-Year Era

Barcelona, Plaça dels Àngels. If you’ve skated in Europe in the last 30 years, you’ve dreamed of MACBA. The small five-stair. The perfect ledges. That glass-smooth ground in front of the contemporary art museum. The most filmed, most visited, most legendary spot in European skateboarding.
It’s over.
Museum expansion work began mid-February 2026. The five-stair has already been destroyed. The project — 16.26 million euros, by firms Harquitectes and Christ & Gantenbein — will transform the plaza into a green space with trees, benches, and play areas. Work completion expected early 2027.
A protest was organized on February 27th in the plaza. Skaters shouted « We are citizens too. » But Barcelona made its choice. And that choice doesn’t include skateboarding.
Sants — Possible Resurrection
Plaza de Sants, Barcelona’s oldest spot — skated since the 80s — was completely demolished in February 2025. But here, there’s a glimmer of hope.
Local skaters created the SNT4EVER association and achieved something unprecedented: negotiating with the city council for the new plaza to replicate the original 80s-90s design and remain skateable. If confirmed, this is the first time an organized skateboarding community has saved a historic spot through political means.
The renovation will last 18 months. We wait. We hope.
Brooklyn Resurrects Its DIY

While cathedrals fall, catacombs rebuild. In Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, a DIY spot built in 2017 by the Nike SB crew was demolished and the builders arrested. In 2026, a new generation led by Moe (@do_or_die__diy) is starting from scratch — hand-poured concrete, GoFundMe funding.
Jenkem Magazine covered the story in January. That’s pure skateboarding spirit: they tear down your spot, you come back and rebuild. No permits, no sponsors, just hands and cement.
Kansas City Builds Under a Bridge
The other good news: Kansas City is building a 16,000 sq ft park under the new Buck O’Neil Bridge. Designed by New Line Skateparks with the MOKAN Skates association. The kicker? 250,000 pounds of recycled steel from the old demolished bridge are integrated as art installations around the park.
Skateboarding literally born from the ashes of infrastructure. Poetic.
Fukuoka — Japan Strikes Again
Japan isn’t just dominating contests. Fukuoka is building the country’s largest indoor skatepark — 9,000 m² site, 3,000 m² skateable surface, with Olympic-format Street and Park areas. All-weather, international competition. Opening planned for 2026.
When a country invests like that in infrastructure, competitive results are no accident.
Skateboarding Loses Its Walls But Not Its Soul
Embarcadero. MACBA. Sants. Three names that forged the vocabulary of modern street skateboarding. Their disappearance is like tearing down the Wallenberg banks or dismantling the Hubba Hideout — oh wait, we already did that.
But skateboarding survived Hubba’s destruction. It will survive MACBA’s. Because skateboarding’s DNA is to transform any piece of concrete into a playground. Brooklyn proves it. Kansas City proves it. Fukuoka proves it.
Cathedrals fall. Skaters build new churches.
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