London's WAR on Parkour

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  • čas přidán 13. 06. 2024
  • Many of London's most famous Parkour spots have been demolished by councils around London. In this video we explore the impact this had on the London Parkour scene.
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Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @JimmyTheGiant
    @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety +887

    I've had some comments saying that I'm ignoring the poor behavior of freerunners, perhaps I should have elaborated on this.. I don't condone the very small percent of freerunners who left litter and were poorly behaved, however this was a small percent of them. I believe from the loss of these spots the Parkour culture has further matured and learned from this.
    I totally agree that free runners need to respect locals and be upstanding citizens and the majority are!

    • @aickavon
      @aickavon Před 4 lety +76

      I think stating that 'very small percent' of freerunners might be considered a cop out by many. If we consider the large groups of people that visited such locations as vauxhaull and say that one out of a hundred of those people was a bad egg... well, that could be a bad egg once every day to once every week (I'm not actually sure HOW popular the location was, I don't have any numbers, but it seems like it was a regular spot based on your accounts). This, along with the simple fact that people often wanted to be just left alone when they approach their home (not that you're bothering them, but loud noise is loud noise in a lot of people's opinions), I can see why they'd have a justified bone to pick. You had mentioned yourself that the spot didn't look good to a non-parkourer... it really did look meh and bland. Same with the other locations. Some of these locations and stunts looked quite dangerous if performed incorrectly. With very high falls, or even nearby traffic.
      To say London has a war on parkour may be over reaching or not, but I wouldn't blame them if they did. People who they don't know, performing dangerous tricks without any credentials can lead to a lot of issues that they want to avoid. You had even mentioned it yourself that a lot of the best parkour places were derelict locations... a lot of these could've been redone for the simple sake of redoing them, with parkour as an 'in design' decision rather than the decision that they based the entirety of their action on.
      Now instead of being a negative nancy or a critique on all things parkour. I do think it's a cool concept, but it's often considered damaging and dangerous... for example, those that do any roof action can potentially damage the roof or fences. I would suggest that the parkour community get together more often and put money into community facilities where they got all sorts of cool and fun parkour designs for their tricks whilst also adhering to safety standards such as having someone medically trained or at least a kit and someone who can call an emergency line.

    • @greanhare5270
      @greanhare5270 Před 4 lety +41

      Even if none of them are behaving "poorly" by freerunning standards, I still wouldn't want a bunch of people running around near my home and doing stunts that could potentially result in having their brains splattered over the pavement because they miscalculated a jump and landed head-first on the corner of a concrete block.

    • @joonaskosonen95
      @joonaskosonen95 Před 4 lety +30

      Yeah, im from Finland so my english is not great, but i own property that had popular youth hangin spot, some spots to parkour and skate. I had them demolished becos first, the damage of places and cleaning the trash started to cost me, peoples didnt want to move in because loud youth whit carrying speakers blasting music and if polices were called they just moved away for half our or so and came back. Also one kid broke there leg and quest who the parents came to yell at. To me, so i chose to demolish the spots and install couble stone to make skating imposible. I have no sympathy for parkour and skaters who do it on wrong places. My town build 2 skate parks and parkour stadium but they are almost empty becasue nobody uses them.

    • @thes.k.eletonhunter7951
      @thes.k.eletonhunter7951 Před 4 lety +18

      Free runners could also band together and maybe clean spots across London to maybe improve the public view of free runners.

    • @drakelucian7691
      @drakelucian7691 Před 4 lety +19

      Hey not sure if you'll see this but I think an interesting video would be you talking to some people (Ideally in a live format for transparency) about the two sides to this. You aren't really responding or interacting with people that don't share the same outlook as you in the comment despite being fairly active in responding to those you do have the same views as. Your comment is dismissive and shows either disregard or lack of understanding of how other people must feel, even in the video you showed some small signs of understanding that this was the natural course the city would take, an underused park home to a group that actively breaks laws and preforms dangerous stunts is not something anyone outside of said group would want to encourage. Junkies Jungle likely required maintenance that would be cheaper without the walls and people jumping on them and almost certainly leaving more litter than you lead on. As for Vauxhalls after being asks to leave so many times to the point where residents had to put up signs, ask for police intervention and more signs, then finally destroy it shows a constant disrespect towards the people that lived there by everyone involved that by definition would be the majority of the people you've mentioned. I think people would be more accepting if you focused on transitioning what should really only be happening in places designed for parkour or completely out of the way of city development and especially property owned by people that don't want you there. If you want to actually support this community you could at least respond with more than "Most don't do anything wrong, and I don't support those that do," which comes off as extremely disingenuous as a comment on its own let alone in the context of your video. I deeply respect the sport and was interested not only in practicing but the community too, but after watching this it is hard for me to respect the people involved.

  • @STORROR
    @STORROR Před 4 lety +1229

    Great work jimmy

  • @m.j.3452
    @m.j.3452 Před 4 lety +1021

    This is like taking a tour with a guide who actually loves his job 👌

    • @ras_krystafari3333
      @ras_krystafari3333 Před 4 lety +6

      Had tour through London with a an absolute mad lad who loved his job felt like a NightBus Harry Potter day tour through the city to Bath, and Avery/Stone Henge , best tour ever

    • @schwifty6855
      @schwifty6855 Před 4 lety +2

      Thats a cool analogy bro. Got a smile from me

    • @calcium6253
      @calcium6253 Před 3 lety +1

      Annie...Where’s the blacksmith

    • @m.j.3452
      @m.j.3452 Před 3 lety

      @@calcium6253 How would I know? We just went shopping. That's all we did😅

  • @switchtheflip9422
    @switchtheflip9422 Před 4 lety +548

    That's what sucks. Even if 90% of a group are respectful and considerate, there are still the 10% who ruin it for everyone.

    • @camdamcool6125
      @camdamcool6125 Před 4 lety +21

      Yep, one bad apple ruins the bunch. Such a shame to hear about this, as an outsider who has never even thought about parkour watching this really felt like parkour was a warm community and somewhere chill and escapist to hang out.

    • @MarksMarbleRacing
      @MarksMarbleRacing Před 4 lety +6

      That's life in general.

    • @Tobi-xj8xw
      @Tobi-xj8xw Před 4 lety

      that's what happend to the rc hobby

    • @RovingTroll
      @RovingTroll Před 4 lety

      @@camdamcool6125 Nah man, everything's cool. These are just the rare bad apples, but you gotta think of all the good ones who never do anything wrong, and if you dare to question the culture of our apples we're going to have you committed to a mental hospital.

    • @waryth4475
      @waryth4475 Před 3 lety +1

      @Active Username You don't just claim these public space as your own and be a nuisance to the public.
      Just because its public, you hang around on that spot every single time to the point that you're not letting others use it for other purpose.

  • @stalkerofthezone1698
    @stalkerofthezone1698 Před 4 lety +1087

    London: * destroys parkour sites *
    Parkour Pros: * goes up to the roofs of buildings, factories, and establishments *
    London: *0o0*

    • @MorfsPrower
      @MorfsPrower Před 4 lety +80

      It's amazing how much funding goes into such vain attempts to keep people down. And in the end, it doesn't work. They end up wasting more than they could have made with just renovations. But hey, it's London. Or really, just a big city. It's hard to find a city that actually runs itself effectively.

    • @imightbearacist6613
      @imightbearacist6613 Před 4 lety +7

      i mean, if we do get some teens falling to their deaths, can be a good thing you know, clean up the gene pool a bit.

    • @hoodlum4511
      @hoodlum4511 Před 4 lety +7

      The biggest middle finger to safety

    • @hoodlum4511
      @hoodlum4511 Před 4 lety +1

      The biggest middle finger to safety

    • @daviddewar6008
      @daviddewar6008 Před 4 lety +1

      @Wills Pram lmfaooo

  • @nightscapeofficial
    @nightscapeofficial Před 4 lety +444

    Ahh man I actually get upset thinking about all the memories from Vauxhall’s maze, I vow to one day recreate it exactly the same! RIP ❤️😭

  • @FlowUrbanFlow
    @FlowUrbanFlow Před 4 lety +323

    Recreating famous spots in a gym is an amazing concept. I would love to see a gym make a combination of shapes of all the best spots around the world, kind of like the concept of Tony Hawk American Wasteland

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety +22

      that'd be dope

    • @FlowUrbanFlow
      @FlowUrbanFlow Před 4 lety +18

      @@JimmyTheGiant Well there's a will, there's a way. And I've got a friend name Will, he works in construction.

    • @skyettv
      @skyettv Před 4 lety

      @Got_nuffin_on_me this is specifically recreating the most famous places, not just places you can do it

  • @AveragePixel
    @AveragePixel Před 3 lety +193

    man, seeing spots like these makes me wish i didnt live in a small town

    • @SnailHatan
      @SnailHatan Před 3 lety +4

      For real. Living in small towns and suburbs really fucks with my ability to train. Yes, there are some things you can train anywhere, but there is so much more that you can’t.

    • @Yeahyeah993
      @Yeahyeah993 Před 3 lety

      Makes me wish I didn’t live in America.

    • @ethandevine4706
      @ethandevine4706 Před 2 lety

      Make me wish I didn't live in Australia

    • @p.gin3955
      @p.gin3955 Před 2 lety

      Makes me wish I didn't live in Croatia

    • @turtlegamez4274
      @turtlegamez4274 Před 2 lety

      @@p.gin3955 ehej, još jedan Hrvat! Pozdrav

  • @DomTomato
    @DomTomato Před 4 lety +106

    RESURGENCE: game changing moments pls!!

  • @bjarki_rafn
    @bjarki_rafn Před 4 lety +771

    I feel like the title "London's WAR on Parkour" is a bit of a reach. The first two examples could very easily be the cause of the places being in bad condition, like you mentioned, and Vauxhalls' demolish could be kind of a fault of the parkour community at the time. I mean, how would most people feel if there were large gatherings all the time in front of their home, loud music and littering. The reactions of the residents are very understandable and I often feel that us as a community need to have some understanding and respect for the muggles who don't understand the sport, even if they don't show us the same respect. Trying to change a whole community is hard, but hopefully worth it.
    However it's really fucking annoying when the demolish spots

    • @sefflikejeff1917
      @sefflikejeff1917 Před 4 lety +199

      It's just a title that sounds nicer. Who would click a video titled "various instances of London parkour spots being demolished for various reasons"

    • @bjarki_rafn
      @bjarki_rafn Před 4 lety +104

      @@sefflikejeff1917 However it is misleading and inaccurate. I don't really fancy a catchy title that makes me feel cheated.

    • @onreact
      @onreact Před 4 lety +95

      @@bjarki_rafn I think you guys are both right. You can create a clickable headline without misleading. Why London is Destroying Iconic Parkour Spots would be more accurate and still intriguing.

    • @NickmanTraceur
      @NickmanTraceur Před 4 lety +12

      Bjarki Rafn:
      The title isn't far from the truth. Since you're talking about community, then why you divide the practitioners as if like some of them are not residents there or like they're two different things? If you want to talk about community then share a thought of those residents to approach the people gathering on those spots and talk about being collectively concerned and to just train while keeping it low. The same goes for littering and so on. This by the way does not mean that every person is aware and/or concerned of the same things, but that doesn't mean they're incapable of it or to just sit and accept the destruction of places. You could also pay attention that certain people and companies took advantage of such "opportunities" to make profit out of workers residential areas. The concerns of those residents are not even in person, 88% of them found themselves being annoyed and they put it in a sign.. Like wtf, that's not a community, that's squidward's hometown. Not to mentions fines and all sort of measures. So the title is more than enough.

    • @bjarki_rafn
      @bjarki_rafn Před 4 lety +3

      @@onreact Great title, because the story is quite interesting but sad and I really did enjoy this video essay, if that's the right term.

  • @LucasDimoveo
    @LucasDimoveo Před 4 lety +165

    One - I love that you've interviewed so many people on this.
    Two - I'd love to get your take on Parkour competitions (and possibly the divide between how North Americans see them vs. other places in the world)

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety +10

      yeah i deffo want to do something like that

    • @smeme_the_meme_4744
      @smeme_the_meme_4744 Před 4 lety

      I completely agree. North America vs Europe

    • @spectre3257
      @spectre3257 Před 4 lety +3

      I live in North America and do parkour/free running. I'm just curious what you guys see the divide is. Personally I think here people don't really even know what parkour is which is so surprising for me.

    • @alexanderrahl7034
      @alexanderrahl7034 Před 4 lety +4

      As a north american, i can say this.
      No competitions.
      Its just not what the sport is about.
      I came into parkour at the end of my high school days. Which was apparently around the end of the whole debacle involving that MMA guy and his big parkour branding thing that almost killed it.
      I came into parkour not as a sport or competition, but as a philosophy and way of life.
      A freedom of bodily movement.
      I think to try making it a competition would cheapen the philosophy and sort as a whole, and start us on that old path again that almost destroyed us.
      I find the lack of competitive attitude around parkour breeds a very friendly atmosphere within the community to lift eachother up and do better, rather than be about being better than others.

  • @DrewIsSharing
    @DrewIsSharing Před 4 lety +144

    Yo this was sick. I'd love to see a video on the impact basingstoke had to parkour, with 3run and the original famous spots!

    • @leumseelal3031
      @leumseelal3031 Před 3 lety

      Ye

    • @Iat850
      @Iat850 Před 2 lety

      @DrewIsSharing do you still practice parkour/ tricking in your free time? keep up the skateboarding and informative content 👍

    • @DrewIsSharing
      @DrewIsSharing Před 2 lety

      @@Iat850 Nah but i do occasionally still bust out a flip or two. Been meaning to go to a gym so i can learn these side / front pre things everyone doing

  • @GuilleWhat
    @GuilleWhat Před 4 lety +46

    such an interesting and quality content! keep it up bro🤘🏻

  • @Oedwai_Gang
    @Oedwai_Gang Před 4 lety +110

    How much quality content are you gonna put out bro!?!? Seeing 15+ min vids about a good ass topic makes me so excited! Keep it up big man🤠

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety +6

      haha biggup bro, I just love telling these stories.

  • @aidenknox6247
    @aidenknox6247 Před 4 lety +129

    Mate the story of your first time at vauxhall got to me. So so relatable. Everytime you would see people in baggys heading for the promise land in front of you

  • @thoughtlesskills
    @thoughtlesskills Před 4 lety +96

    Love the sport but if you're gonna do things that can damage or otherwise accelerate the wear of public or private property that is not your own, you're gonna get pushback. Shopping centers get tired of rebuilding curbs because skaters grind concrete. Then there's the chances of you hurting others or impeding traffic, just saying don't get upset when the local gov says no.

    • @1988ryan1
      @1988ryan1 Před 3 lety +8

      1. Do you understand how flesh and clothes on concrete and metal trucks on concrete curbs are seperate things right? Skin and clothes will never wear down concrete as it is softer, so the concrete wears down the parkour-ers not the other way around. So that point's just illogical, not like the whole point of public property is for use by the public(including freerunners) either.
      2. Picking the bad apples from the basket and saying 'this is how all parkour is' isn't how to view things (also trespassing isn't illegal by any means as it's a civil offence not a criminal one, not that i agree with it) the parkour groups that litter ect isn't because they do parkour it's because they're just idiots and theres no correlation or statistics around 'doing parkour forces you to litter' other than in your biased anecdotes.

    • @brianjc720
      @brianjc720 Před 3 lety +16

      Im_Ryan You guys seem to harp on about “bad apples”. But you do realize that to the resident LIVING there, all of the freerunners were bad apples. You can’t intrude on a person’s living space and comfort space for your own enjoyment and not be a “bad apple”. There were literally 40 kids at one point. Even if they were all respectful and not your so called “bad apples”, to the residents having 40 kids constantly jumping around, making noise, and just generally being a disturbance is more than enough to leave a bad taste. Imagine if where you live, eat, and sleep you had a bunch of kids hanging around, playing music, messing around, and etc.Yes it’s not as destructive as skating but it’s just as intruding nonetheless. Not even to mention the repercussions of getting sued bc a kid’s mom was angry their child was hurt on the location. You don’t realize these freerunners were being very selfish and enjoying things without thought of consequences.

    • @brianjc720
      @brianjc720 Před 3 lety +15

      Im_Ryan Not to mention that by freerunners using that spot to parkour, they are taking the space for themselves when it was originally meant for the residents. Even the IMAX jump is incredibly selfish. It’s a really cool spot and all and the jumps are amazing but that’s when you don’t think about the consequences. It’s a jump literally right next to a very active road. The jump itself forces you to jump towards and in a lot of cased directly onto the road. At this point it’s a game of statistics. Somewhere down the line someone is going to get seriously hurt or killed doing so. Are the cars there supposed to drive slower bc freerunners decided to make that their spot? What is the city council going to say when an understandably upset mother confronts and probably sues the city about why they let these kids put themselves in that danger. It’s not that the city council is a great evil out to destroy freerunners’ happiness, but the fact that a lot of the ways that freerunners enjoy their sport is at the expense of others. It’s an incredibly selfish sport in the city. Yes trespassing isn’t a criminal offense but it’s a 100% dickhead move. Because it isnt their property. When they damage, and yes they will inevitably damage property, whether it be through their disruptive presence or physical damage, they aren’t the ones paying for it.

    • @eclipsegfxable
      @eclipsegfxable Před 3 lety +1

      @@brianjc720 Cope.

    • @dr.dylansgame5583
      @dr.dylansgame5583 Před 2 lety +1

      @@brianjc720 people with that logic have clearly never lived in the suburbs where you have to deal with this kind of stuff on a daily basis and its just part of life just like how I dont complain when every guy cuts there grass every two seconds making my allergies spike during the summer making it damn near impossible to go outside for more than 15 minutes on a hot day

  • @JimmyTheGiant
    @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety +172

    RIP Vauxhall! Biggup all the real ones who share this video on their Insta story ❤

    • @cadinnelson5168
      @cadinnelson5168 Před 4 lety

      JimmyTheGiant anyone know where I can find the shirt at 10:19? I went to their website and it’s not listed, was it a limited time run or something?

    • @Spud_Farmer
      @Spud_Farmer Před 2 lety

      ~|~

    • @Spud_Farmer
      @Spud_Farmer Před 2 lety

      Rip

  • @mrman991
    @mrman991 Před 4 lety +46

    Junkies just looks like it was redeveolped to reduce maintenance cost. If they had fixed the fountain, they'd then have to maintain the fountain.
    Can't help but feel Vauxhall might still be around if the people using it had always left it tidy, not made a nusance of themselves (loud music etc) and respected the residence and given back to the area in some why.
    I'm not taking a side, more just looking at it from other angles, it's a case of people not realising how their actions are percieved by others.
    The parkour guys and girls just want to get out, do some excercise and push them selves, but if they're leaving litter, making noise, intimudating the residence and percieved as a nusance, they'll get moved on.
    The residence just want to live a quiet life and enjoy their homes, if you've got groups of people whooping and hollaring, that's not going to happen and it can make people feel like prisoners in their own homes.
    The councils should really see these kinds of emerging sports as things that require some focus and build facilities or dedicate space for them but then accidents happen and could cost the councils money they don't have.
    I also imagine that those large groups would get unfairly associated with street gangs\etc which also wouldn't help in keeping spots open.
    Really interesting video though, I'd love to see a street tag game.

    • @endyender1703
      @endyender1703 Před 4 lety +3

      mrman991 you want to know what that does? You’re not stopping them from parkouring. You just took away the relatively safe places that they could parkour at. They will then move onto doing more dangerous parkour. Such as on rooftops, at home, or even actually being a nuisance. They were out of the way at Vauxhall and Junkies. By the way, it didn’t seem like anyone else was using the parks...

    • @mrman991
      @mrman991 Před 4 lety +6

      @@endyender1703 sounds like you're agreeing with me tbh.
      They need safe places to practice etc.
      People might not have been using the space at junkies but people lived around Vauxhall which was my point.

    • @bumblebee3358
      @bumblebee3358 Před 3 lety +3

      @@endyender1703 were others not using the space because of them though? I don't get many free runners in my neck of the woods but I have seen someone crash into a fairly elderly man after clowning around on a wall with his friends. luckily he only seemed to be rattled by it and the guy who fell shrugged off his scrapes but the old guy could have been badly hurt and at his age it probably wouldn't have been a speedy recovery.
      When someone comes careening out of nowhere it can be very alarming. People often don't like to be scared out of the blue so it can make you come across as scary and aggressive even if you aren't and you don't hit anyone. Some of the stunts also looked like they might cause a car accident.
      You might well be the nicest bunch on the face of the world but a group of people "loitering" around would certainly be enough to make me take a detour, especially if I was alone and it was a quiet location. People often (rightly or wrongly) make snap judgements about others to keep themselves safe. This can be incredibly unfair but there we are.
      If you want others to respect your hobbies then you have to be respectful of the wider community. A couple of bad apples can easily tarnish the publics opinion of your whole community so it is important to self police even if it takes some of the fun out of it.
      Consider yourself to be an embassador for your community and contemplate ways to integrate with others through outreach (for instance providing properly run activities for children, or taking part in relevant community improvement projects).
      If you actually contribute to society in a visible way then others tend to be a lot more accommodating.

    • @brianjc720
      @brianjc720 Před 3 lety +5

      Endy Ender Yes but the key point is they aren’t bothering those residents. They even asked the freerunners to stop and held a petition to ascertain the general opinions of the residents. But as you can see the freerunners mocked the signs telling them to stop and kept going. And the thing is, it did stop a lot of them from freerunning. As the video states, there was a dip in parkour popularity in the UK. So what they essentially lost was a convenient hang out spot for freerunning that they used at the expense of the residents there just trying to rest and live their lives.

  • @Axel3815
    @Axel3815 Před 4 lety +16

    I don't do Parkour, i didn't looked anything about it up in years. Why is this in my Recommendations and why did I watch and enjoy the hole thing?

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety +2

      Welcome to the world of parkour

    • @troubleinbound
      @troubleinbound Před 4 lety +1

      Dude, same. This is interesting stuff

    • @ucitymetalhead
      @ucitymetalhead Před 4 lety

      Yeah this was a random suggestion to me but it's always fascinating to watch them do stuff that I never could.

  • @theknave4415
    @theknave4415 Před 4 lety +227

    While I am glad to see so many younger people doing parkour, these days, you must act responsibly, especially on CZcams videos. ;) (I was doing parkour in the 1980s).
    e.g. If I had several young men per day bouncing off the roof of my house, or over my fence, it would not only be irritating, but it would cause damage to the roof and fence.
    That would cost me $$$.
    Be aware that others also have rights. ;)

    • @nighthawk3305
      @nighthawk3305 Před 4 lety +3

      1.- what do you mean by "acting responsible on CZcams" 2.-if you see people enjoying but having a problem why not as a mature adult, speak to them and to make an agreement.

    • @mikeshogunlee
      @mikeshogunlee Před 4 lety +21

      @@nighthawk3305
      Better question.
      Why does he have 69 likes (ey!) and you have none?
      Something to think about.

    • @alexanderrahl7034
      @alexanderrahl7034 Před 4 lety +11

      Yea i dont fuck with peoples buildings. A couple small municipal structures of concrete maybe, to practice my wall runs.
      But im not going on top of buildings or houses. And most good practitioners will tell you not to either.

    • @UncleKennysPlace
      @UncleKennysPlace Před 4 lety +14

      @@yoketah Actually, if a large group of strangers regularly gathered near my private residence, I'd be a bit worried.

    • @marcd7332
      @marcd7332 Před 4 lety +4

      night hawk I didn’t bring crayons to explain such a simple comment to you

  • @oscarard7482
    @oscarard7482 Před 4 lety +21

    I don't even parkour, and i'm not even from London, but hell this video was great.

  • @Emppu_T.
    @Emppu_T. Před 4 lety +30

    If I'm someday an architect, im gonna create something for the lads

    • @Spud_Farmer
      @Spud_Farmer Před 2 lety

      +15 chad respect

    • @LudwigVaanArthans
      @LudwigVaanArthans Před 2 lety

      You would probably not be picked up by any project to do so though. People do not want their property to be used by others and that will always be true, regardless how much people whine about it.

  • @marikroyals7111
    @marikroyals7111 Před 4 lety +4

    As someone not into Parkour I have to say the take way I get from this video is that the people who do parkour kind of did this to themselves. The places you talked about had people going and hang outside of people's homes, being disruptive, trespassing, and causing damage, with a chance of injury and possibly causing a lawsuit. If I lived somewhere where large group of people who don't live there come to hang out and make noise I wouldn't like it ether and I would feel intimidated to tell them to go.
    Hell some of these are done right next to roads and what if someone overshoots into a vehicle or in front of one? Now some innocent person could be scared for life and/or take a financial hit and people injured or killed because of somebody's fun.
    Now if a parkour park was created or it was done in a public square without disrupting the rest of the general public fine, but just finding a spot willy nilly and hanging out with a disregard to the surrounding area, you're asking for trouble.

    • @MrKentakie
      @MrKentakie Před 4 lety +1

      Parkour can be done anywhere and doesn't need structual support. Freerunning however (this video is mainly about shitty free running) needs this stuff to perform trickery.. aaand they don't have the money to build a park of their own.

  • @seanparker4461
    @seanparker4461 Před 4 lety +28

    So, without getting into the usual arguments, what would you think about this: Get some people together and day dream up and idea setup for parkour, kind of like this place you described. Draw it, tweak it, etc etc.. Then make a 3d model and make a silverlight of it or something so it can be on a web page where a person can turn it around and look at it from all angles. Maybe even where they could WASD their way around the inside. Then find a piece of land somewhere, demographics and such. Once you've found a great place and you've got a solid idea of what you would want there, start a kickstarter campaign. If you could get the land bought, the structures built, then you could sell memberships to pay for upkeep and insurance.
    Here in the states, there's a city close to where I live that has tons of things like you showed. They're popular with free runners as well as skate boarders. The issue the city has with these people isn't that they're climbing over things. It's not even that they litter (which they do). It's the lawsuits. A person would do something stupid, get messed up, then sue the city or the owner of the property AND WIN. One that got in the paper that I remember reading, the kid got a quarter of a million dollars out of the lawsuit. In order to find a solution to this problem, a guy's really got to look at it from all sides. There is a solution, we just have to find it.

    • @vikingraven4758
      @vikingraven4758 Před 4 lety +2

      I think your idea is excellent. Don't think US would be the best place to put the first such spot in though, for the same reason you described in your comment. As much as your bill of rights is a masterpiece, your law system as a whole is complete garbage.

    • @parkourstudi0s980
      @parkourstudi0s980 Před 3 lety +1

      The only problem Sith that would be ages I don't got a problem with kids but you know how it is with Karen's and Chad's it would be like a skate park parkourists getting snaked every five seconds and parents thinking it's just some playground to leave your kids at and the second a kid get knocked down by accident or falls its hell from the parents who want the whole place to burn

    • @k.m.f369
      @k.m.f369 Před 5 měsíci

      The costs would be too extreme. Esp in us. The legal fees alone (combating the concept being set up too) . Whoever owned the land as well as the city would be a target forever. I Dont think you can get around that. Sad.

  • @jeremyloh7563
    @jeremyloh7563 Před 4 lety +40

    As I'm from Malaysia, where pkfr isn't as big of a deal as it is in London/UK but still very impactful, I'm so grateful to be able to say that our government hasn't decided to take any negative actions whatsoever on any of the spots here so far. It will be inevitable (at some point in my life as a teen) that spots will die out or be demolished, but this video has now let me have a newfound appreciation for my spots. I'll be sure not to take them for granted now, haha. There's always true quality content from this channel, keep up the awesome work!

    • @troylai563
      @troylai563 Před 4 lety +1

      Brooo Singapore Bishan Maze gone!! I haven't even touched it yet! Now it's a bicycle parking area

  • @Gma.parkour
    @Gma.parkour Před 4 lety +13

    Cheers for the cheeky shout out! Solid video as always man, glad I could help

  • @rarh3643
    @rarh3643 Před 4 lety +9

    I only very casually follow Storror and the parkour scene so I did not expect to get chills from seeing people rebuild an iconic spot that I only learned about 5 mins earlier from the same video! Just goes to show that this is a passionately loved sport that encompasses a lot of important ideals of adaptation, freedom and perseverance. Hats off guys! Keep doing what you do 🤟🏻

  • @sakachi242
    @sakachi242 Před 4 lety +4

    i'm not a free runner, but damn this was well put together. great job man. and sorry to hear all these great spots got taken out.

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks man, i love hearing people outside our sport enjoy the stories

  • @jibster148
    @jibster148 Před 4 lety +16

    I'm still quite new to training but something about london makes me want to just forget my limits and push my boundaries in ways that not many other places can. Truly the mecca of parkour

  • @MrEpicGamer25565
    @MrEpicGamer25565 Před 4 lety +13

    I wish I had a counter of how many times I've watched resurgence, I would LOVE to see a video about its influence on modern PKFR. Also you're killing the content game right now I'm loving it

  • @troubleinbound
    @troubleinbound Před 4 lety +6

    This takes me back to when I skateboarded. I went to the Brooklyn banks on my own little pilgrimage like you did to Vauxhall. My hometown also demolished all the good spots so I related to the crushing feeling of watching a favorite spot reduced to rubble.
    Keep up the good work, man. I love your content!

  • @Art_Rambo
    @Art_Rambo Před 4 lety +8

    Thanks for video!

  • @Hanuman_
    @Hanuman_ Před 4 lety +14

    This sounds more like a story of not respecting your environment and the people already living there. I can understand why anyone would be annoyed by loud noise and anti social behaviour. I think parkour is sick but shit man imagine having that next to you 24/7, would be hell.

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety +1

      hopefully the scene has learnt from it, i feel most are very respectful

    • @jaywilliams720
      @jaywilliams720 Před 4 lety +1

      i ain't even do parkour but i skate and i feel for these guys. what really were the kids doing wrong? old guys get away with blasting music out their balconies and in their gardens all the time and the only reason is because people understand it. the kids were enjoying themselves, listening to music they liked and getting exercise. simply put the residents were just scared because they didn't understand. it's such a contradiction, they'll complain that kids don't get enough exercise nowadays but they don't want them outside if it's near their homes. pure hypocrisy

    • @vikingraven4758
      @vikingraven4758 Před 4 lety

      @@jaywilliams720
      Agreed. People are far to on guard towards their community nowadays.

  • @LukeCunningham
    @LukeCunningham Před 4 lety +12

    Jimmy "I could probably make a whole video on this" the giant.

  • @HelamanGile
    @HelamanGile Před 4 lety +14

    Does parkour on Parliament Parliament oh shoot we're going to have to tear that down

  • @ThatTsukuya
    @ThatTsukuya Před 4 lety +3

    I love watching these semi-nostalgic parkour videos from you. You really capture the feeling people would've had at those spots and manage this in all of your videos. Back when parkour was really booming I was pretty young (I'm only 18 now so that says a lot) and I thought I was awesome to be able to lazy vault over small benches at my school lmao. Even though I never got to train at big spots or anything I got to see a lot of freerunners doing stuff at different spots in my hometown (which have been demolished now) and I was always in awe and wanted to do things like them so much. I used to play Mirror's Edge and watch youtube videos on parkour (around my beginner's level) and get that feeling of being a part of this awesome sport even though I only had 1 or 2 friends into it at the time. You could always get a sense of the community feeling in those old videos and it's great to see you re-capturing that feeling in your videos.
    I guess what I'm trying to say is even though I wasn't very old or good at parkour at the time of its booming, your videos still remind me of the feelings I had back then and give me a glimpse of what it would've been like to visit those spots and make new friends instantly- be a part of the culture, y'know?

  • @mrs.megaminx287
    @mrs.megaminx287 Před 3 lety +9

    Freerunners: having fun*
    London: _and i took that personally_

  • @FBI-qp6rh
    @FBI-qp6rh Před 4 lety +24

    These dude doing flips off high places even jump 2 feet without breaking my ankles

    • @uzi-07
      @uzi-07 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah I do pray for Doms ankles sometimes man, their too strong

    • @BenSohlberg
      @BenSohlberg Před 4 lety +1

      @@uzi-07 they're*. But yeah Dom's ankles are steel.

    • @Mackers1
      @Mackers1 Před 3 lety

      i can’t even jump without nearly dying

  • @sam13793
    @sam13793 Před 4 lety +1

    so good man, really get excited when you drop a new vid

  • @denzilhogan6902
    @denzilhogan6902 Před 4 lety +2

    The year I moved to London, the first day I walked up to Imax to look around and immediately was greeted by all the boys that then formed PHAT, learned so much from them and levelled up immensely training there, switched out parkour for Olympic weightlifting and miss pk everyday!

  • @melsrozing8495
    @melsrozing8495 Před 4 lety +3

    love these videos so much, makes me appreciate how much i've got to experience in this decade of parkour

  • @JasonProUnicyclist
    @JasonProUnicyclist Před 4 lety +3

    As someone who was lucky enough to hit Vauxhall but sadly just missed Elephant & Castle, this was an awesome piece to watch. It's sad that local communities feel urban sports in general, are a threat. The signs up around Barbican, criminalising movement, are reminiscent of the signs from Vauxhall. It sounds like you could have gone down the rabbit hole, talking about the role gentrification has played in destroying many spots and I certainly would have enjoyed watching it. Part 2 soon.
    Great video. Thanks for sharing.

  • @mcpk616
    @mcpk616 Před 4 lety

    The quality of these vids are mental. Such great content Jimmy

  • @eliotepk1543
    @eliotepk1543 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for your work man, it's really cool to have access to all of these informations without having been in the sport for 10+ years lol, feels like the sport is really growing because of dedicated people like you

  • @Reegareth
    @Reegareth Před 2 lety +4

    It's unfortunately unfair but what you said about how the public sees parkour quote "the parkour community were often seen as a bunch of hoodlums " Is the truth for most folks. The honest truth of the matter is free runners don't own the stuff they are using and they are often trespassing on places that belong to others. I know that most of the community is just having fun and doing no harm intentionally but the sad truth of the matter is the general public sees it as a bad thing. I think that what really needs to happen is official parkour parks be made in city centers similar to skate parks.

  • @justaweeb9086
    @justaweeb9086 Před 3 lety +4

    This is solid evidence for the terrible dystopian world we're creating. "Why don't you kids play outside?" Everyone asks while they take away every fun thing that's free. If you want to have fun nowadays you have to pay. Parkour was free. It was a friendly cool community around the world and you could have fun doing it with your friends and they're trying to take it away.

    • @Amphyb
      @Amphyb Před rokem

      play inside. we don't care. as long as you're not bothering people who try to chill at home with an open window.

  • @christoshtz
    @christoshtz Před 3 lety

    Good job Jimmy. Thank you so much.

  • @theswagapanda2676
    @theswagapanda2676 Před 4 lety +1

    Love how in-depth this video is man

  • @liz5100
    @liz5100 Před 4 lety +45

    Did at no point anyone in the community just... idk actually attend any public meetings of the council or any hearings discussing the demolition of these sites? I'm not entirely sure what the differences are between city/county council business in the UK versus the US. Here in the US if you're going to do any construction work on a site you have to get permission first and that includes a public hearing. Anyone in the public can attend and even bring legal representation to in order to voice reasons for or against the project. I also see your pinned comment about how you don't discuss the behavior of free runners who used these spaces. I think it is a much larger issue than even your off hand comment seems to make it out to be. If a majority of 88% of residents don't want you there it's not because you leave a couple pieces of litter or only played loud music. Vauxhall doesn't look like a nice neighborhood that would have enough money to make false claims and persuade the council to spend the money to do this kind of thing. There's also the issue of trespassing and not for its own sake. Again I'm in the US, but here if you're on someones property and get hurt they can be held accountable. For example if you own a bunch of saws for wood working, leave them out in your front yard unattended, and someone walking past you house tripped into one you can be found at fault. Why were you leaving shape blades where someone could get hurt? is the question that drives these negligence cases. If someone got badly hurt while doing these, sometimes, risky tricks the company who owns the property (or the city itself) could be held accountable. They knew people were there who weren't supposed to be performing dangerous tricks why didn't they ensure the public's safety? These two reasons combined are why cities don't want free runners around. It might help if the community actually behaves like a part of the bigger community. This is not an 'us' vs 'them' situation, free runners are the ones who didn't take any legal measures and instead, from your own video, chased residents around with their pants pulled down? I love Parkour, but for it to be taken seriously the rest of the community needs to take responsibility and we all need to grow up.

    • @tomsilberberg1978
      @tomsilberberg1978 Před 4 lety +7

      I'm a young man in the UK who spends my full time campaigning for local community, environmental, cultural and social projects.
      I'll tell you this, trying to get anything done by local councils or authorities is a similar sensory experience to receiving a severe concussion.
      Everything moves at a glacial pace. There is no accountability, reason and logic is optional.
      It would be funny if I didn't have to watch my community dissolve in real time.

    • @LegendOfTheFLame393
      @LegendOfTheFLame393 Před 2 lety

      Hell states like Texas and Ohio can get you shot and killed for trespassing on land as so many people have attempted to harm livestock steal or murder people trying to live their lives

  • @jalenandrew2387
    @jalenandrew2387 Před 4 lety +7

    This parkour series is so damn good! You and Storror are the real MVPs of this lockdown

  • @samgarzapk
    @samgarzapk Před 4 lety

    Such an amazing video Jimmy! I remember first going to London in 2018 and visiting imax. I was in awe at first because it was the first time I had been at such an iconic spot. I started training and then I noticed other freerunners started to show up. That was something that I wasn’t use to because here in Chicago we have a very small community and everyone who trains here knows each other. The fact that you could go to imax and see other freerunners there at any time of the day was so incredible to me and it just goes to show how strong the parkour community is not only in the city of London but in the world! This is the reason why I love this sport keep it up with the amazing content.

  • @chrismang8137
    @chrismang8137 Před 4 lety

    I love your documentaries so much man, really nice research and perfectly summarised ❤️

  • @hugonamy7504
    @hugonamy7504 Před 4 lety +5

    I was not doing parkour at this time but but I'm always wandered where is this spot exactly before I just learn with this video that he was destroy... So sad ...

  • @parkourchris3958
    @parkourchris3958 Před 4 lety +32

    Gyen is secretly the MVP for the London scene.

  • @alantheunicorn6362
    @alantheunicorn6362 Před 4 lety +1

    I seriously love these videos!

  • @Siik94Skillz
    @Siik94Skillz Před 4 lety +1

    yo your videos are SICK! definitely earned my subscription man! I was part of the parkour community back in the times of Vauxhall! Great times indeed ! almost made me cry

  • @KingWolfred
    @KingWolfred Před 4 lety +5

    Holy moly why haven't I seen your channel before?

  • @rodrigopalma6466
    @rodrigopalma6466 Před 4 lety +3

    Hello, my name is Rodrigo I am 16 years old, now that I did it on April 13 and I am from Portugal, I started Parkour when I was 13, 3 years ago, I started watching security vs parkour videos and when I heard I was watching Storror training in those places, those moments, they exchanged joy and happiness, I wish I could see those spots in real life but unforeseen events happen.
    I hope to see more of your videos.

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety

      What thing do you live the most about parkour?

    • @rodrigopalma6466
      @rodrigopalma6466 Před 4 lety

      @@JimmyTheGiant what i live the most about parkour is the movement and the community it self we can anderstand each other and the fun we have when doing it.
      In personal with out the parkour community (because i train alone for 3 years now) i love to brake mental barriers and when i brake i feel good and proud

  • @chrismckibbins948
    @chrismckibbins948 Před 2 lety

    Got onto your channel after a Bouldering >>climbing >> Storror>> Jimmy rabbit hole .....good content mate ive enjoiyed everything

  • @joellarsson2168
    @joellarsson2168 Před 4 lety

    So good put together!

  • @pkbreeze08
    @pkbreeze08 Před 4 lety +6

    My favourite thing about the days when I used to train was merging with groups of freerunners that I didn't know, spending a whole day together and walking away with a lifetime of friendship.

  • @almo6359
    @almo6359 Před 4 lety +9

    Boy i kid you not, for the past two weeks I have been planning a video on the history of IMAX. Anyway - the joke you made about IMAX being taken down is actually quite interesting. During my research, I found out that the Waterloo roundabout (where IMAX is) may be re-done. There are plans to remove parts of the roundabout and replace it with a larger pavement - let's hope IMAX isn't affected.
    Also great vid btw 👍

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety +2

      Can't wait to see that please send it to me!

    • @peeron6829
      @peeron6829 Před 4 lety

      Nice i want to see that video bro

  • @Noct_Nano
    @Noct_Nano Před 4 lety +2

    I never got into parkour, but the amount of passion and love you show to the scene is beautiful. I hope you never lose that.

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety

      Thank you very much, I've learnt so much from growing up with this sport so i want to do everything i can to share that

  • @theninjoshexperience9365
    @theninjoshexperience9365 Před 4 lety +1

    Love all your content

  • @taco2347
    @taco2347 Před 4 lety +17

    you could post anything rn and i'd watch if this INSANE quality is kept up

  • @FlowUrbanFlow
    @FlowUrbanFlow Před 4 lety +7

    If I could ever come across any freerunner in the wild, I would be soooooo happy! I've literally started the scene around me, and have only met new people at jams

  • @yuchaofan
    @yuchaofan Před 4 lety

    love these videos man

  • @denester1
    @denester1 Před 4 lety

    I can only imagine how much work is put into the research AND editing... Keep it up!

  • @ThaWaverunner
    @ThaWaverunner Před 4 lety +7

    After a good 13 years in parkour, I finally met Blue at IMAX, when Kie brought me to a Storm shoot they were doing. That was history for me bruh. Met him at the spot I saw him get down at in 05 Jump Britain. Brazy!

  • @gram_gaming
    @gram_gaming Před 4 lety +3

    the best content!!!

  • @martinv.-
    @martinv.- Před 4 lety

    This video is so valuable! Thanks a lot for making this.

  • @dylantaylor7972
    @dylantaylor7972 Před 4 lety

    Love these!!

  • @leandrosilva2508
    @leandrosilva2508 Před 4 lety +3

    I have been doing parkour since I was 8 (am 21) and I always had the dream of visiting London not only for the city but for the incredible spots I saw and that I grew up in parkour. Parkour in my country is still seen as vandalism but whenever I saw one more video it gave me motivation to continue
    Today I continue to dream to visit London just to train and learn more about this incredible culture that is parkour
    Parkour is not just a sport it is a way of life
    Portugal has much more to know than Lisbon

  • @toxxic8600
    @toxxic8600 Před 4 lety +3

    Cheers for using my music again boss ✅ sick video🔑

  • @IvanGorbenko
    @IvanGorbenko Před 4 lety

    great video!!! so much memories

  • @felixcollins817
    @felixcollins817 Před 4 lety +1

    sick documentary as always 🌊

  • @gk-m5855
    @gk-m5855 Před 4 lety +4

    Aye man i love this channel. Being that my a PK athlete. The stories u tell Jimmy are just beauitful. And insprition much love to u Jimmy❤❤
    #PkLondonForever 🏃

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you brother

    • @gk-m5855
      @gk-m5855 Před 4 lety

      @@JimmyTheGiant Anytime fam thx. For the content

  • @josefwakeling7103
    @josefwakeling7103 Před 4 lety +4

    7:09 it says "we don't not want" and only specifies yu cant be a class of 15 or an individual or train at 8am or 4pm, so basically that's fine 😂

  • @pkbreeze08
    @pkbreeze08 Před 4 lety

    Awesome video mate, great doc with a bit of important PK history. Thank you 🙏

  • @GetOffUrPhone
    @GetOffUrPhone Před 4 lety

    Fascinating video as usual. Props!
    Definitely wanna tune in for more, especially what you talked about at 12:13

  • @1984Phalanx
    @1984Phalanx Před 4 lety +13

    I've never heard of such a brutal and shocking injustice that I cared so little about.

  • @kiekhiaflow8067
    @kiekhiaflow8067 Před 4 lety +21

    Actually i didn't travel anywhere and all i wanted is to go to London's spots Madird's spots and that Maze of Singaphore that has been gone too
    Great documintiry Jimmy 🙏
    Much love from Syria,lattakia ❤️❤️

  • @denali.siruno
    @denali.siruno Před 4 lety

    I absolutely love your videos dude keep it up

  • @VibesForever
    @VibesForever Před 3 lety

    these videos are so just well done i can't help but learn

  • @Arthur.franks
    @Arthur.franks Před 4 lety +13

    My g !! The London parkour scene will never die.

  • @maxandrea396
    @maxandrea396 Před 4 lety +4

    This really made me feel the same when are skate spot in the north of England was destroyed it was called “blue curb” and if you was a skateboarder in our area it’s where you would go and it was our iconic spot I remember when me and my mate was slightly younger like year 8 or something like that and first went to the curb not knowing it was a main skate spot of the area and seconds after more skateboarders turned up and immediately welcomed us in as their colleagues and there was some others who was our age too , but it’s just the vibe and the connection you share with each other which makes it.

  • @JimBLogic
    @JimBLogic Před 4 lety +1

    Nicely put together history right here

  • @daanmichiels3512
    @daanmichiels3512 Před 4 lety +1

    again amazing!!!

  • @nathanpratt3058
    @nathanpratt3058 Před 4 lety +19

    Its bc they dont want to see u jump around all over their stuff, if they asked and I bet they have, parkour would never stop happening there
    So it makes sence

    • @gamertrask9153
      @gamertrask9153 Před 4 lety +7

      Your grammar and sense is worse then the Vauxhall’s Destruction and such a Horrible take on it They wanted the noise to stop

    • @Tehinstrumentalist
      @Tehinstrumentalist Před 2 lety

      @@gamertrask9153 hate to be the one to point this out, but it is spelled Vauxhall. You also missed some punctuation - don't critique grammar if you won't use it accurately yourself, it reflects poorly on yourself.

    • @gamertrask9153
      @gamertrask9153 Před 2 lety

      @@Tehinstrumentalist dude this was a year ago but thanks and believe me I’ve had worse opinions then this

  • @astieluv
    @astieluv Před 3 lety +17

    I wouldn't want children screaming on top of their lungs and playing loud music under my window either

  • @NathanicusSmith
    @NathanicusSmith Před 4 lety +2

    Loving these documentaries.
    Pleasant surprise to see Gilles and Rene in there too.

  • @GeorgijSosunov
    @GeorgijSosunov Před 4 lety +1

    You talking about people traveling to London, to train at Vauxhall made me cry slightly on these beautiful memories! Coming there from Germany in 2009 it heavily impacted my Training, as I can still remember every detail of my first weirdly angled precision. Vauxhall made me think outside the box and, in this way, still influences me up to today.
    Thanks for your vids! Appreciate them a lot. ❤️

  • @joseaguilera9533
    @joseaguilera9533 Před 4 lety +4

    One question: Why couldn't they just put up no trespass signs?

    • @ugy8392
      @ugy8392 Před 2 lety

      bruh who cares about a sign

  • @charliebrittable
    @charliebrittable Před 4 lety +12

    RIP junkies jungle. Was probs my fave

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  Před 4 lety +2

      was such a fun spot, i can't imagine what people would be doing at it these days

  • @itsnotaneon8344
    @itsnotaneon8344 Před rokem

    Please give us more rollerblading content every single time you post about your rollerblading journey everybody enjoys it!

  • @walter1345
    @walter1345 Před 4 lety +1

    Solid video Jim'

  • @DeadlySkittleZ
    @DeadlySkittleZ Před 4 lety +7

    didn't know Harry Potter had a youtube channel. Why did it take me this long to find out.

  • @fooxik70
    @fooxik70 Před 4 lety +6

    imagine if they spent that money on making more safe parkour spots

  • @ronicavalcante9685
    @ronicavalcante9685 Před 4 lety

    Incredible video, man! I love stories about our sport, even if they are not about my local community 😂
    Thanks a lot for bring this things up. Big hug from Brasilia, Brazil ✌🏽

  • @LPnotes
    @LPnotes Před 4 lety

    Nicely done!