Skate park could get big-name sponsorship
Alicia Robinson
Costa Mesa-based Volcom, the skateboard and surf clothing company
that uses the slogan “youth against establishment,” is going to work
for the man.
Well, that’s one way to put it. City officials have negotiated a
potential 10-year, $300,000 deal with Volcom to sponsor the city’s
new skate park, which is set to open this summer at TeWinkle Park.
The City Council tonight will consider the naming rights
agreement, the first of its kind in the city. If it’s approved,
Volcom’s benefits will include placing its logo in three places on
the skate park’s bowls and installing a logo-shaped shade shelter,
and the park will be called “Volcom Skate Park of Costa Mesa.”
In exchange, the company will pay the city at least $30,000 a year
during the 10-year agreement, and it will be offered an option to
renew for 10 more years.
A consultant hired by the city talked with a number of companies
about sponsoring the park, but Volcom was the logical choice because
it’s local, Costa Mesa recreation manager Jana Ransom said. In fact,
two Volcom employees were on the skate park design committee.
The company also was willing to commit a significant amount of
cash to the city and agreed to relatively tasteful advertising, she
said.
“We could have had Target and Blockbuster and Carl’s [Jr.] and all
those take different portions,” said Ron Hagan, an associate with the
Public Enterprise Group, the consultant that hammered out the Volcom
agreement. “That would have provided a lot of mixed messages on the
site. It would have looked like a strip mall instead of a city
facility.”
A Volcom spokeswoman declined to comment on the deal.
The money from the proposed skate park agreement would basically
offset the cost to run the park. The easily quantifiable cost is an
estimated $10,000 a year for electricity to light the park, but other
“soft costs” such as cleaning and maintenance drive that total up.
Construction of the park is expected to cost about $1 million.
The park is likely to be a model for other sponsorship
opportunities in the city, a perhaps ironic twist in light of how
vehemently some people opposed the park’s creation. The Public
Enterprise Group is working on a report, due out this summer, on
other facilities or services for which Costa Mesa might find
sponsors.
“The million dollars that we’re putting in [to the skate park] up
front, we’re going to get back a portion because we have a sponsor,
and there’s no other amenity that’s municipally owned right now that
we can say that,” Ransom said.
Also on the council’s agenda tonight are proposed rules for skate
park operations and an ordinance that would allow city police to
enforce the rules. Suggested hours of operation for the park are 8
a.m. to 9 p.m. daily.
Recreation staff members are recommending the park not be
supervised because it increases the city’s liability, but signs would
be posted advising people they must wear helmets and other safety
gear and that they use the park at their own risk.
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