At
last! KP has its own skate park
Facility dedicated in memory of Zech and Adi West
By Hugh McMillan
KP News
In keeping with the traditions that
made Volunteer Park the apple of Key Peninsula’s eye,
volunteers again turned out to build its latest “sports
center,” the long awaited Zech & Adi West Memorial Skate
Park.
Workers from Sequim-based Northwest Recreation
of
Washington ignore the drizzle as they work to
place
various skate park.
Photo by Hugh McMillan |
A crane-like machine is used for pouring the
concrete.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
It began June 26 with a pour of concrete on a
steel-reinforced platform covering Volunteer Park’s
decaying upper tennis court. The rebar and supplies were
provided at cost by Addison Supply. The pour, smoothing
out, and seasoning were accomplished by Oliver Lystad
Construction of Vaughn and his crew members, all of whom
contributed their long hours free of charge. BoMac
Concrete of Port Orchard provided the concrete at cost.
And it was all accomplished over two days of almost
incessant drizzle and rain. The expressions of
accomplishment, the gratifying glow of giving, the nonhesitating hard work that began at 7 a.m. and was
still underway near midnight was a testimonial to what
this community is all about.
On July 18, after the concrete had
set up and seasoned and after the seventh annual KP
Community Fair crowd had trod its surface, tons of
pre-cast concrete skate park components, half pipes,
platforms, even a “picnic table” from Skate Concepts
were anchored on the concrete slab by experts from
Sequim’s Northwest Recreation of Washington. On July 19,
all units were bonded together permanently and the steel
transition entry ramps were welded to their bases. Once
again, it was all accomplished in a constant drizzle of
rain.
“The list of those who made
possible the skate park is long. We couldn’t have done
it without the support of the community,” said Chuck
West, founder of the Zech & Adi West Memorial
Foundation, which spearheaded and paid for the project.
“They came through with donations and help all along the
way.”
Isaac Lystad, 6, helps the crew from Lystad Construction,
owned by his father, Oliver, who donated the
labor to the project.
Photo by Hugh McMillan |
Chuck West, who spearheaded and helped fund the project
through his Zech and Adi West Memorial
Foundation,
works on the site.
Photo by Hugh McMillan |
For West, a division chief with the
KP fire department who grew up on the Key Peninsula, the
park is the realization of a dream — to honor the memory
of his son, Zech, an avid skateboarder whose life was
cut short by tragedy.
Long ago, the father and son
vacationed in Idaho, where Zech enthused over a skate
park.
He encouraged his dad to create a similar facility
on the Key Peninsula. With appropriate approvals of the
then KP Park & Recreation District board, the two of
them and others built a wood-framed, steel-sheeted “half
pipe” on a scarcely used, in-need-of-repair tennis court
at Volunteer Park. While not “state of the art,” the
kids swarmed over it like bees in a rose garden. Being
somewhat heavier than bees, their flying athletic skills
soon reduced the structure to one deemed unsafe for
continued use. It was taken down. Zech’s enthusiasm for
skating, however, did not abate.
Not long after graduating from
Peninsula High School, Zech volunteered for the U.S.
Navy, fulfilling a longtime dream of becoming a Navy
Seal. During training in the mid-West, he met and fell
in love with Adi. Thereafter, while Zech was on
assignment to Italy, the couple’s correspondence
culminated in their wedding in her home town while he
was on leave. Their honeymoon brought them to visit
Zech’s family on the Key and to borrow dad’s vehicle for
a few nights in the Cascades so that Zech could share
the mountains with his new bride. There, three weeks
after they were wed, they were lost in a tragic
accident.
At a memorial luncheon at the Wests
not long thereafter, all those in attendance agreed to
do whatever it would take to fulfill Zech’s dream for a
permanent skate park to be created on the Key Peninsula.
The Zech & Adi West Memorial Foundation was formed, the
proposal was successfully presented to the newly formed
Key Peninsula Metropolitan Park District and, in
cooperation with KPMPD, plans were formulated for a
skate park at Volunteer Park. A well-attended
fund-raising dinner sponsored by volunteers with mostly
contributed supplies and freely offered entertainment
and a dance was a big success. Car washes, table
waiting, and a plethora of other efforts contributed to
the funding effort; Pierce County Councilman Terry Lee
contributed significant county funds to support the
endeavor.
Isaac Lystad watches from behind the safety fence. While
dad Oliver and his crew poured the concrete, his
entire family
was there to watch the work.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |

Ignoring the move between drizzle and downpour,
Chad Smith of Zeigler’s Welding and Hitch Shop
of
Olympia, arc-welds transition plates together on
one
of the ramps at KP’s new skate park. Transition
plates smooth the way for skaters to roll aboard
the
various components of the park and eliminate the
chipping away of concrete that would occur were
they
not in place.
Photo by Hugh McMillan |
Just as many community-minded
individuals assisted in creating Volunteer Park — which
has served as a model for other communities in the state
as an example of what volunteers can do for their
communities — so did the community rally once again to
see the skate park dream come true.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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