Brokenhearted skateboarders who have long been denied access to Philadelphia's internationally renowned Love Park may have a new object of affection. It's called Paine's Park.
The $4.5 million city plaza officially opens Wednesday - but don't call it a skate park. Officials say it's a 75,000-square-foot public space that happens to be skateable.
Supporters have spent more than 10 years trying to build the park. It now sits next to a popular exercise path along the Schuylkill (SKOO'-kul) River, offering amenities for both skaters and non-skaters.
The project was spearheaded by the Franklin's Paine Skatepark Fund. The advocacy group was founded after boarders were exiled from Love Park in 2001.
Then-Mayor John Street instituted the ban because he said skaters were destroying the park's granite ledges, steps and benches.
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