![]() ![]() Skateboarding is no different, and Nottingham’s always had a healthy, kicking-against-the-pricks skate scene, sometimes beyond all odds or rights. Closer to home, look at what constantly falls out of Forever Records, Stuck on a Name and JT Soar for living, breathing, and totally vital proof of just how important a central place of communion is for any gaggle of folks. ![]() Look at all the rad stuff that fell out of CBGB, or The Fillmore, or Studio 54. Better yet, a collection of hubs to thrive and survive. We take a look back at Non-Stop, as well as a look forward to the community of Forty Two, and why shops like these are so important to Nottingham’s skate scene.Īny sort of scene needs a hub a place to meet, greet, chat shit and get weird at. Four years before shop was shut, Forty Two Skate Shop opened its doors on Victoria Street, and still remains as a vital hub today. ![]() It wasn’t just a place to buy a deck, but somewhere people gathered to share their love of skateboarding. The city received a bullet to the chest when the legendary Non-Stop Sports closed its physical doors. ![]()
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