Shine Hikaru B/S Nose Blunt top

NIWAMICHI
SKATE PARK

with
Shine Hikaru
【Eng.】

20260301

Words by Stinky Eagle, Photos by Masahiro Yoshimoto

February 15, 2026. Niwamichi Skate Park in Yokkaichi City, Mie Prefecture, officially closed its doors. The park was originally built as part of a temporary urban development experiment. It was only supposed to last one month.

But things didn’t go as planned — in a good way. The scene grew way bigger than anyone expected. Because of that energy, the city decided to keep the park alive for about three and a half years, right up until redevelopment began.

 For this issue, we asked Mie’s leading skater, Shine Hikari (SOUTH TREE skateshop) — one of the key people who worked hard to keep the park running — to share his honest thoughts.

Yokkaichi locals coming through!
Yokkaichi locals coming through!

— If we were to carry this social experiment skatepark into the next project, what do you think is most important?

[ The “Success” and “Failure” of a Skatepark ]

First of all, if we want to carry this experiment into the future, we need to keep sharing what we believe were its successes and failures — the good parts and the bad parts — with the city officials, local residents, and the skateboarders of this area.
We want to build on the new ideas that came out of this project and pass that knowledge on — not just to the next urban development here, but to other regions across Japan that are struggling and looking for solutions.

 

If you’re going to build a skatepark right in the middle of a city like this, it has to be more interesting than the existing street spots. It needs sections that are fun, creative, and truly addictive. If it doesn’t spark excitement or give people a sense of hope, they simply won’t use it. That sense of vision — and how you move with it — is more important than anything.

Lately, we’ve seen a lot of new parks being built, but people end up disappointed with the sections. Some parks require helmets at all times. Others suffer from poor management. We hear about these negative cases way too often.

If the mindset is just “it’s better than nothing,” the park won’t even last three years. And in the end, it just becomes a waste of public money.

Takumi Wada B/S Nose Grind
Takumi Wada B/S Nose Grind

[ About Management ]

During the social experiment period, researchers and city officials handled things like locking up every day, so there were no major problems. Even after the experiment ended, many locals voiced their hope that the park would reopen. Originally, the plan was to start tearing it down the day after the final event. But instead, the city decided to leave the park standing until the next phase of redevelopment began.

 

After that, on holidays, weekends, and during long school breaks like summer vacation, an older gentleman dispatched through the city’s silver staffing program would come to unlock the gates. Of course, that meant labor costs, so the park stayed closed on weekdays. We went to talk with the city many times for the sake of the users. But there was no additional budget available, and sometimes the focus was only on the negative behavior of a few skaters. Still, it felt like such a waste to keep it closed. People would travel from far away and not be able to skate. Local kids, finding it locked, would end up skating nearby, get yelled at, and then come to me asking for help.

 

It was a public park run by the city. I always felt it should have been managed better for the people actually using it. At the end of the day, though, it’s simple. Skaters follow the rules, and the city just doesn’t lock the fence (laughs).

 

When a park isn’t used, trash piles up, rails start to rust, and ledges fall apart. It really makes you wonder what “real management” means (laughs).

[ Rules and Etiquette ]

 

When it comes to rules and etiquette, it really depends on the location and the area, so enforcing everything strictly is tough. But the reason rules matter is exactly because we want to skate as freely as possible.

 

This particular spot had a lot of history. Before the war, it was a fighter plane runway. After the war, trees called “kusunoki” were planted there as a symbol of peace. Since many of these trees grow along the median strip of a road in the middle of the city, people were really careful about not damaging the plants and avoiding fire hazards. That’s why smoking became a hot topic, with the city and nature lovers pointing out issues in detail.

 

But there weren’t really any designated smoking areas nearby, and there weren’t many no-smoking signs either. So a lot of people just didn’t know, which caused problems. I even heard things like, “We can’t open on weekdays because of smoking etiquette issues.”

 

That conversation actually went on longer than the park discussion, and I don’t even smoke, so yeah, it couldn’t have mattered less to me (laughs).

If you really want to make a big deal out of smoking, then we might as well go to war. Anyone smoking inside? I’d just blast them away with a powerslide (laughs). Seriously though, if it was that big of a problem, why not just put out some ashtrays? So I went ahead and put them out myself—multiple times.

 

We spent what felt like forever talking about things that could’ve been solved in a minute, which almost made me lose it—but honestly, I was kind of enjoying it (laughs). If you really want to separate smokers from non-smokers, then don’t bother lighting up the holiday decorations—just put more ashtrays around the city! Even for picking up trash, the area in front of city hall had the most cigarette butts. The dirty kids were picking them up and smoking them too (laughs).

Kazuma Inada, Aoi Ishimaru, Aimu Yamazuki,  round ledge session!
Kazuma Inada, Aoi Ishimaru, Aimu Yamazuki, round ledge session!

[ And Then There’s the Trash Issue ]

 

The trash issue back then was handled mostly by our local kid Yuga—he was still in high school and had that leader vibe, basically keeping the younger crew in line. When adults were making a fuss about garbage, he didn’t argue; he just went ahead, bought trash cans himself, set them up, and took it upon himself to clean up. Along with the other young locals and various people, he handled it in a super cool way, so trash wasn’t really a problem at the time.

 

Honestly, if anyone was tossing garbage, it was probably more the adults than the kids. And, well, those types are the ones whose ollie landings are always crooked, who freak out over a minor scratch, and who seem completely oblivious to everything around them—including their own knees (laughs).

 

Personally, I kind of treat trash like part of the section. If a can rolls into just the right spot, I might go for a tail bash. So I don’t think the people picking up trash are automatically heroes—but the ones who litter? Yeah, that’s just gross. Still, no need to make a big deal out of it; crows will carry some of it off, and you can always just pick it up yourself.

 

Back in the old Wakamiya park in Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture, it was so filthy I didn’t even want to fall—so my trick success rate actually went way up (laughs). But Niwamichi? That place was just too nice to need any trash.

Toa Sasaki, backside 360 kickflip
Toa Sasaki, backside 360 kickflip

— What’s Needed for Skaters and the City to Coexist?

City officials usually handle the everyday business of running a town. But when a skatepark suddenly pops up right in the middle of the city, just hearing about it can make some people uneasy. There’s a lot of bias, too. Many of them think, “Why do we have to make a park for these ‘wild’ kids who’ll just trash the city? Why should taxpayers foot the bill?”—and honestly, a lot of people just don’t feel like dealing with it.

 

Those who are out in the field a lot, seeing the city’s issues firsthand, probably want to handle things properly. But many others, stuck in office work all day, don’t really feel that way.

 

When there’s a risk of problems, they’d rather not touch it. If something goes wrong, no one wants to take responsibility. Those fears and overreactions build up, and the result is… doing nothing. Nothing gets done. Making rules in that kind of environment doesn’t really solve anything. In fact, rules often turn into new problems, which then just create even more issues. I guess you could say it’s partly human psychology at play.

Yushin Hashimoto, frontside nose blunt stalefish grab
Yushin Hashimoto, frontside nose blunt stalefish grab

When you’re trying to coexist with people you’ve never had any connection with before, people often say, “Try to see things from their perspective”. But honestly, just being nice and trying to understand them won’t cut it. Not at all.

What I realized is this:
instead of standing in their shoes, "I try to make them stand in mine". That’s the mindset I bring when I deal with them.

This project started with zero connection to the city.
We didn’t know them, and they didn’t know us. There was no trust at all.

Most of them didn’t even know the first thing about skateboarding. To be honest, we were questioned like we were under investigation. Every move was doubted.

So the first thing we did was listen.
We heard them out, answered every question without running from anything. And at the same time, we slowly tried to pull them into our perspective — to get them to stand where we stand. Little by little, we let them feel why we were so hyped about this.
Once they started to sense that excitement, I think a lot of their fears faded. And that’s when motivation started to grow on their side too. I also realized something:
when you turn an argument into a discussion, the way things get across changes completely. And that makes all the difference.

We didn’t have time to fight.
The only option was to work together.

On top of that, we were seriously short on time before the project had to launch. There was real pressure.

But at the same time, I had confidence. I’ve been skating in this city for years. I know these streets.

That gave me the belief — and the calm — that we could see it through.

I kept thinking about how many spots I’ve built over the years.

Just like what I’m doing now with SOUTH TREE — there were barely any skaters, nothing there to begin with. And still, I’ve kept creating something out of nothing. New parks. Shops. Business models.
And more than that — new connections, new energy, real growth. I’ve done it again and again. So yeah, I knew I could definitely do it this time too.

Slappy jam!
Slappy jam!

But yeah — I definitely messed up on one thing. I put so much time into this project that I ended up a few million yen in the red (laughs). My own shop was almost gone because of it. Honestly, I was saved over and over again by the distributors and the brands around me. I owe them big time. At one point I was thinking, “If just a few hundred people come buy skateboards, we’ll be fine.” Yeah… it wasn’t that simple (laughs). Pretty sure all those customers ended up at M—Sports (some big chain shop) instead (laughs).

 

But if a place is created for people, or if a place already exists, I think we should give more back to it.

That’s really all I wanted to express by building this park. Skaters like us, who skate no matter the environment, can definitely do that. With that in mind, I always faced everything head-on. Even through all the meetings we had, I never once stepped back.

The reason is simple: I never asked anyone to build a park for me. Because of that, there was no need for any hierarchy. That’s exactly why we could speak as equals — and why I’m truly glad we were able to make it happen.

Yusuke Takazawa wins!
Yusuke Takazawa wins!

I’m really glad I got to skate at Niwamichi Skate Park, even though it’s gone now, with so many people from the local community. Not just other skaters, but residents, city officials, staff, and even the mayor were genuinely happy. On the last day of the event, my friend’s dad broke down in tears and hugged me.

Even Jake Johnson gave us praise.

 

Just by building a skatepark, so many amazing things like this can happen — it’s truly the best.

 

Big thanks to PANCAKE for the interview. And yes… I’m eating PANCAKE tomorrow.

NIWAMICHI
SKATE PARK

with
Shine Hikaru
【Jpn.】

Shine Hikaru, backside nose blunt

Words by Stinky Eagle, Photos by Masahiro Yoshimoto

2026年2月15日。 三重県四日市市にあったニワミチスケートパークが閉鎖となった。話によると都市開発の社会実験として設けられた期間限定のパークだったという。本来は1か月で姿を消すはずだったパーク。だが、想像以上の盛り上がりを受け、四日市市は再開発が始まるまでの約3年半もの間、その場所を守り続けた。今回、パーク存続のために奔走した三重を代表するスケーター、シャイン光(SOUTH TREE skateshop)に今の率直な思いを綴ってもらった。

Yokkaichi locals coming through!
Yokkaichi locals coming through!

---今回の社会実験のスケートパークを次に活かすとしたら、何が重要だと思いますか?

[ スケートパークの"成功"と"失敗" ]

 

今回の社会実験を次に活かすために、まずは自分たちが思うこの実験の成功と失敗、良いところと悪いところを、行政、市民、その地のスケートボーダーに伝え続けたいです。実験から生まれた新たな案を活かし、次の都市開発や全国の困ってる地域に知らせたり情報を共有したい。

今回のように街の中にスケートパークを作るのであれば、その街にあるストリートスポット以上に、面白いセクションだったり夢中になれるクリエイティブな物を作らなければ、沢山の人たちに期待も希望も伝わらなければ、利用もされないと思うので、本当にそこのセンスと立ち回りは何よりも重要だと思います。


最近ではパーク沢山できたからといってセクションにガッカリする人がいたり、ヘルメット強制着用だったり、管理体制が悪かったりして、良くないケースをとても聞きます。無いよりはマシと言う感覚だと3年もそのパークは持たないとおもいます。本当に税金の無駄になる。

Takumi Wada, backside nose grind
Takumi Wada, backside nose grind

[ 管理体制について ]

今回の社会実験期間中は、研究者の方々だったり役所の方が、毎日戸締りなどをしてくれたため問題なくいきました。実験終了後もパーク再開を望むローカルの声が多くあがりました。そのため当初の予定では、最終日のイベントが終わった次の日から解体でしたが、次の開発時期までパークを残してくれることになりました。

そこからは、祝日や週末や学生の長期休暇(夏休みなど)の期間は、市が委託してるシルバー派遣のお爺ちゃんが開けにきてくれました。でも、それにも人件費がかかるので平日は開けてもらえず、利用者のために何度も話し合いに行きましたが、市にはそのような追加の予算などは見込めなかったり、利用者の悪いところだけを突かれたりしました。それでも開いてないのは勿体無いし、遠いところから来た人も滑れなかったり、ローカルキッズも開いてないからその辺で滑って怒られて、俺に泣きついてきました。

 

行政のパークやし、もっと利用者のために上手く改善するべきだなとずっと思いました。まぁ利用者は決まりを守り、行政はフェンスに鍵をかけなければいいだけの話なんですけどね(笑)。

 

公園は利用されない方がゴミも溜まるしレールが錆びたり、縁石の状態も悪くなる。「本当の管理とは?」って感じでした(笑)。

[ ルールとマナー ]

 

これに関しては、その場所や地域によって何もかも違うので、徹底する事などは難しいですが、できるだけ自由に滑りたいからこそ、必要なのがルールとマナー。

 

今回の場所は戦前、戦闘機の滑走路だった場所に戦後、平和を願うため、楠木という木を植えた、平和を象徴するような場所で行われました。街の真ん中の道路の中央分離帯に沢山の楠木が生えているため、植物を傷つけない、火災の危険性などが重視されたので喫煙問題が、行政や自然愛好家から細かく指摘されました。

 

でも近辺には喫煙エリアなどもなく、禁煙の看板も少ないため、分からない人が沢山いたので、そこは困りましたね。「喫煙マナー問題があるから、平日は開けれない」なども言われました。

 

この話はパークの話より長くて、俺タバコ吸わないからマジでどうでもよかった(笑)。

よし、そこまで差別がしたいなら戦争しかないです。中でタバコ吸ってるやつはパワースライドで蹴散らします。と笑いに変えたり...。てかそもそも、そんなんだったら灰皿置けばよくないっすか?と思い、灰皿も勝手に何度も置きにいきました。

 

すぐ解決できそうなことも、何も解決しようとしない話しを一生してたので、キレそうでしたがそういうのも楽しんでいました(笑)。分煙したいのならイルミネーションなんて点けずにもっと、街に灰皿を置けよ(笑)。ゴミ拾いだって役所の前が1番吸い殻落ちていましたよ。ダーティーキッズが拾って吸ってましたからね(笑)。

Kazuma Inada, Aoi Ishimaru, Aimu Yamazuki,  round ledge session!
Kazuma Inada, Aoi Ishimaru, Aimu Yamazuki, round ledge session!

[ あとはこれもよくあるゴミ問題 ]

 

ゴミの問題は、当時まだ高校生だったウチのローカルのユーガって子が、そいつはリーダー気質で若手の番を張ってくれるような奴で、大人たちが騒ぐゴミ問題にも、反論もせず、自前でゴミ箱を買って設置したり、ゴミ拾いなども他の若いローカルたちを始め、色んな方が、とてもクールな立ち回り方をしてくれたおかげでゴミ問題などは当時、大丈夫でした。

 

なので捨ててるやつは子供より大人のが多かったかも、まぁそんな奴らは一生、オーリーの着地も曲がってるような奴らで、グリッチョ程度の怪我で騒いですぐ消えますし周りのことも自分の膝から上も何も見えていないような奴です(笑)。

 

まぁ俺はゴミもセクションやと思ってるんで、ちょうどいいとこに缶が転がってるからテールバッシュしよう。みたいな。だから拾ってるやつが正義とは思わないが、捨てるやつはキモいと思う。まぁけどそんなんで騒がないでゴミなんてカラスが持ってってくれたりするし自分で拾えばいい。

 

昔の若宮なんて、汚過ぎて転けたくなかったから、メイク率もめっちゃ上がったしな(笑)。
けどニワミチはとにかく気持ちの良い場所だったからゴミは要らないな。

Toa Sasaki, backside 360 kickflip
Toa Sasaki, backside 360 kickflip

---行政とスケーターがうまく共存するには何が必要だと思いますか?

行政さんは、この町の決まった仕事をやってるとはいえ、いきなり降って湧いたスケートパーク建設、その話を聞いただけでも問題が起こりそうなことだったり、偏見も多く。なんで街を荒らすような野蛮な奴らのために公園を作らないといけないんだ、税金をかけないといけないんだ、みたいなやりたくなさそうな人たちも沢山居ます。

 

現場に沢山出ていて、常に街の問題点をよく見ているような人らは、対処したいとう気持ちもあるだろうけど、そうではなく役所でいつも仕事されてる方もいます。

 

問題が起きるようなことには触れたくない。問題が起きたら誰も責任はとりたくない。そのような不安と被害妄想が膨らみすぎた結果、何もしない。何もできない。その状態でルールを作るのは解決に繋がりにくいし、むしろ、ルールがすぐ問題に変わり、また問題が増える。もはや人間の心理もあると思いますが。

Yushin Hashimoto, frontside nose blunt stalefish grab
Yushin Hashimoto, frontside nose blunt stalefish grab

そんな今まで接点もなかったような方たちと共存するとなれば、よく「相手の立場にたって考える」とか言いますが、そんな優しい考えだけでは全然無理です。

 

俺が思ったのは「自分の立場に相手を立たせる」。そのような感覚で接しています。

 

元々行政と知り合いでも何でもない我々が信頼関係もなく始まった、このプロジェクト。スケートボードのスの字もわからない方々に取り調べのようなぐらい勘ぐられては疑われていた。

 

だから、まず向こうの話しを聞きまくって、全て逃げずに答えながらも相手に自分の立場にたたせるように少しずつ引き込む。それだけで、どうして俺たちの気持ちがワクワクしてるのかを、少しずつ感じさせる。そうすればきっと不安だったことも解消されたと思うし、やる気にもなる。伝わりかたも、言い合いを討論に変えればとても良くなると思いました。

 

我々に喧嘩をしている暇はなく、力を合わせ合うしかない。ましてはプロジェクトが始まる期間まで本当に時間がなかった。プレッシャーはとてもあったが、この街で滑り続けている自分なら必ずやりきれるという自信と余裕もあった。

 

今まで、どれだけのスポットをつくってきたか。今やってるSOUTH TREEのようにスケーターも全然いなければ、何もなかった場所に、急に新しくパークやショップ、ビジネスモデルとそれ以上の交流と発展を創り上げ続けているので、自分は必ずやれると思っていました。

Slappy jam!
Slappy jam!

ただ、今回の自分の失敗は、このプロジェクトに時間を費やすぎて数百万、赤字をこきました(笑)。 自分の店が無くなりそうになったが代理店やメーカーに救われまくりました。数百人がスケボー買いにくれば良いだけやな。って願ってたけど、そこも全然甘くなかったです笑、あれ全部ム◯スポにとられたな(笑)。

 

でも、人のために場所ができたり、すでに場所が有るのであれば、人は、場所のためにもっと尽くすべきだと思う。

 

俺がパークを作って伝えたいのはそれだけのことです。どんな環境でもスケートをする我々のようなスケートボーダーなら、きっとそれができる。そういう思いも込めて正面から接してました。何度も交わした会議でも一歩も引くことはなかった。

 

なぜなら自分からパークを作って欲しいとは一度もお願いしていないんで、そこに上下関係とかいらないと思っていたし、それだからこそ対等に話しができてよかったし、実現できて本当によかった。

Yusuke Takazawa wins!
Yusuke Takazawa wins!

今はなくなってしまったニワミチスケートパーク、本当に色んな方々と地元でスケートできて嬉しかった。スケートボーダー以外の市民や、行政や関係者の方、市長にまで、とても喜んでいただいた。最後のイベントの日、友達のお父さんなんて、号泣して俺を抱きしめてくれました。
あのJAKE JOHNSONにまで褒めてもらえた。

 

スケートボードのパークを作るだけで、こんなに色んな素敵な事が起きてとても最高です。

 

インタビューをしてくれたPANCAKEありがとうございました。明日はパンケーキ食べる。

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