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Skatopia's Brewce Martin Hands Over Control And A Notorious Skate Park Is Tamed

Brewce Martin stands by the entrance to his skate park in rural Ohio - Skatopia. [Mary Fecteau / ideastream]
Photo of Brewce Martin, founder of Skatopia.

In the southeastern corner of Ohio, there’s a skate park like no other place on earth.

Twenty years ago, professional skateboarder Brewce Martin created Skatopia on 88 acres of woods and farmland in Meigs County. But Brewce recently suffered a traumatic injury and changes are coming to his utopia.

“I’m out here to survive, give people freedom and try not to go to Walmart,” said Martin, during a recent tour of Skatopia. “Well, I’m not allowed in Walmart, they kicked me out.” 

Martin is a short, strong man, 52 years old but looks younger.

He’s been a professional skateboarder since 1990 and the sport is at the center of his life.

In a ramshackle building near the property’s entrance, Martin has set up a skateboarding museum that he shows to most new arrivals.

“So anyway, epic stuff through here, this is the first skateboard I ever had, a yellow Freeformer that I won from the Parkersburg newspaper in 1978,” said Martin during one of those tours.

Its walls and ceilings are covered with hundreds of skateboard decks. Other rooms are filled with mementoes from his life.

“This piece is the piece that’s been taken out of my brain three times. There is my brain.”

Brewce Martin founded Skatopia in the 1990s as a communal refuge for skaters. [Mary Fecteau / ideastream]

Eight years ago, Martin suffered a traumatic brain injury and spent six weeks in a coma. Since then, he and everyone around him say he’s not the same.

For one thing, he’s become a hoarder. Clearing a seat in his car before driving around his property requires moving arms full of junk around.

“Meigs County is really poor and so we’re constantly recycling, ok, we’re constantly recycling. Whatever we can get,” said Martin, while standing next to a pile of scrap metal.

Scattered around the property, there are piles of sheet metal, trash bins full of empty cans, an old hot tub.

After the accident, Martin’s son, Brandon, came back to Skatopia from the professional skateboarding circuit to help run the place. 

“You know, he’s very impulsive and his ability to control the impulse isn’t there as much anymore,” said Brandon Martin. 

Brewce Martin’s on house arrest, the result of a felony assault charge from last year. The case is still open – he faces years in prison and plead not guilty by reason of insanity.

“I have a really bad temperamental problem now, I lose control of myself a lot of times,” said Brewce Martin.

Watching skateboarders at the Punisher, inside the barn at Skatopia. [Matt Richmond / ideastream]

For 40-plus years, skateboarding has been his life.

But now Martin can’t skate as often or as well as he used to because one of his eyes never fully healed. There’s a hint of defeat when asked about throwing the next big party at Skatopia. 

“It’s just because of the quality of my skating has really diminished and that’s where I, my self-esteem was based in that a lot, so, I don’t know,” said Martin.

Before his injury, the parties here were nihilistic spectacles.

A 2009 documentary called Skatopia: 88 Acres of Anarchy, filmed before Martin’s injury, shows him as the ringleader at the center of mayhem.

A guy stomps around on top of a burning car, a woman spits fire into a room of partygoers, someone holding what looks like a handgun is tossed off the top of a car as it barrels down Skatopia’s dirt road.

Brandon has begun to exert more control. And he’s trying to move Skatopia away from its reputation. No more burning cars. No more throwing fireworks into the barn. No more guns.

Band playing during a June, 2018 party at Skatopia. [Matt Richmond / ideastream]

“I’ve lost a lot of  friends because I’m trying to do something right. A lot of people just wanted to abuse what we were giving and not be grateful for the opportunities we were trying to help people with,” said Brandon Martin. 

So Brandon didn’t advertise much before their most recent party. Fewer people showed up than in the past. No cars were burned. No lit fireworks were thrown into the barn.

And next year, the plan is for invitation-only parties.

So these days Bruce sits on the edge of the party selling t-shirts, while his son tries to bring some order to this anarchist skater punk dreamland in southeastern Ohio.

Matthew Richmond is a reporter/producer focused on criminal justice issues at Ideastream Public Media.