Skateboarding and contested public space in Portrush, Northern Ireland: exploring tensions between resortification and DIY space-claiming through co-creative methodology

The seaside town of Portrush, on the north coast of Ireland, has a strong reputation for skateboarding culture. The Skate Stopped? co-creative research project is a critical intervention in the campaign to `Get Portrush a Skatepark!`, collaborating with the community to raise the profile of skateboarding`s cultural tradition in the area, and engaging the skaters in critical dialogue in this gentrifying context. This article focuses on the project`s video outputs (as published between April and October 2023), picking out two key critical themes: Do-It-Yourself (DIY) culture and space-claiming; and resortification (gentrification in a touristic context). We argue that any contemporary campaign that engages in DIY space-claiming constitutes (at least partially) a critique of neoliberalism—the limitations of skateboarding in Portrush in this regard and the vulnerability to co-optation within a resortifying dynamic are discussed, while exemplifying the insights that can be garnered through co-creative videographic research methodologies.
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Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:technical sports sports facilities and sports equipment
Published in:Sport in Society: Cultures, Commerce, Media, Politics
Language:English
Published: 2025
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2025.2452683
Volume:28
Issue:2
Pages:293-315
Document types:article
Level:advanced