2

Roundwood Skate Park


Roundwood Skate Park is a 488sqm concrete skatepark built by the designers Wheelscape in 2016. The aim was to improve the local skate scene and establish skate and BMX communities through participation.

Creative researcher Leah McIntosh liked to skate, and pointed out the benefits of skating include health, both mental and physical and as a deterrence of crime.

During the Covid-19 lockdown in March 2020, the skate park was open and became a significant place for local young people to come, for fresh air and exercise. Local skaters were interviewed in October 2021, discussing their experiences and feelings about Roundwood Skate Park, and the community of skaters that use it.

What is the history of the land around the Skate Park?

The land of Roundwood Skate Park is separate but related to the main area of Roundwood Park. The history of the land is related but separate too. The field was a separate lot of land, part of the former ‘Roundwood Estate’ and near to a large house called Roundwood House. Roundwood House stood where Roundwood Youth Centre is on Longstone Avenue.

Black and white image of a large victorian house with tower and decorated chimneypots. In the foreground is a group of women and children playing tennis or badminton. On the left hand side are two men, possibly servants, mowing the lawn.
Roundwood House, Brent Museum and Archives, c1890-1900. Image Ref: 557.

The picture shows a large house with tower and decorated chimneypots. In the foreground you can see a family playing tennis and servants mowing the lawn.

Harlesden began to built up in the 19th century, however the area of Roundwood Skate Park remained green space.

Historic illustration showing the area of Roundwood Park around 1915. Roundwood House, Knowles Tower and the White House are marked as well as Longstone Avenue, Harlesden Lane, and Haycroft Farm. The area of the skate park is still open fields, between Roundwood Park and Roundwood House.
A colour image of a map from today showing the area of Roundwood and Roundwood Skate Park.

Left: Map from Cliff Wadsworth’s pamphlet, Roundwood Park, Notes on its History, from Brent Museum and Archives, LHC/1/PAR/2. The map shows the Roundwood Park area around 1915, including the area of the Skate Park, which is open fields.

Right: A screenshot of a satellite view of the same area today. Mapcarta.com, Creative Commons licensed.

Black and white photograph of a field with two men and a horse hand-ploughing a field. A dog also walks by their side. In the distance you can see farm buildings. And trees.
Field in Harlesden (exact location not known), photograph dated 19th May 1931. Brent Museum and Archives Image Ref: 124.
Postcard showing a colour illustration of a farm with cows. The postcard is labelled, ‘Cows returning to pasture after Milking. Welford & Sons, Haycroft Farm, Harlesden’.
Postcard showing Haycroft Farm, which used to be located where Dairy Close, off Harlesden Road, now is. Brent Museum and Archives, Image Ref: 10458
Colour postcard, badly bent and torn, showing cows in a field with a barn in the background. The postcard has been annotated, 'Milch Cows at pasture, Messrs. Welford & Sons’ Farms, Harlesden’. There is also a small printed annotation near the horizon, with an arrow and above it written, ‘Wembley Tower’.
Postcard showing Welford & Son’s Farm, Harlesden. In the distance, on this postcard the old Wembley Tower (designed by Edward Watkins, but never finished) is marked, so this view must be looking north, towards Wembley. The barn looks similar to the 1931 photograph (Image Ref: 124) of a field shown above, so this could be the same view. Brent Museum and Archives, Image Ref: 7155.

What were the temporary Buildings at Roundwood?

After the Second World War large sections of London, including Brent, had been bombed. Many people lost their homes and there was a need to provide houses for people quickly. The field south of Roundwood Park was used to construct temporary homes, known as ‘Prefabs’ (Prefabricated houses), on what was then called ‘Roundwood Park Avenue’.

Black and white photograph of detached houses, made of corrugated metal, and surrounded by grass, with wooden and wire fences. The roads are wide enough for cars to drive along. In this picture you can see trees in the background.
Black and white photograph of ‘Prefabs’ in Roundwood Park Avenue, taken 1959. Brent Museum and Archives, Image Ref: 10533.

Creative Researcher, Leah, noted:

‘These small houses look like large sheds. The houses are detached, made of corrugated metal, and surrounded by grass, with wooden and wire fences. The roads are wide enough for cars to drive along. In this picture you can see trees in the background, which are probably those in Roundwood Park.’

Ordnance survey map showing Roundwood Park in 1959. Below the park you can see an area covered in small ‘Prefab’ houses. You can also see that Haycroft Farm is still marked.
A colour image of a map from today showing the area of Roundwood and Roundwood Skate Park.
Left: Scanned image of a map showing Roundwood Park in 1959. Below the park you can see an area covered in small ‘Prefab’ houses. Image Ref: 10532, Courtesy Philip Grant/ Brent Museum and Archives. You can also see that Haycroft Farm is still marked.
Right: A screenshot of a satellite view of the same area today. You can see that the path that runs near to the skate park is actually roughly where the old Roundwood Avenue ran. Mapcarta.com, Creative Commons licensed.

As more houses were built and people were re-located, the prefabs at Roundwood were removed and the area returned to green space .

Colour photograph showing Roundwood Skatepark. In the foreground a young woman sits on a skate ramp next to a young man with a skateboard, writing on a piece of paper. In the background are two other young men, skating.
Leah and the skaters at Roundwood Skatepark, 2021. Photograph by Lucy Parker
Colour photograph of a small wooden skateboard on a white background
Small skateboard, known as a ‘Penny board,’ Brent Museum and Archives collections. Leah dated this to the 1980s, but more research is needed to find out how it came into the collection. Object Ref: 2004.456

With thanks to Leah McIntosh and the skaters Malachi, David, Leonardo and Aslan.

Find out more here:

Cliff Wadsworth, Roundwood Park, Notes on its History, 2003. Brent Museum and Archives, LHC/1/PAR/2.

Philip Grant, ‘Kingsbury Post-war Prefab homes’, 2019. A talk on Prefabs in the nearby area Kingsbury for the Prefab Museum

Find out about the design of the skate park here

Please also see Brent Museum and Archives webpages for more information on the history of Harlesden and Brent.