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F1 Grand Prix of Canada - Qualifying
Detail of the Red Bull wing during the Formula 1 Pirelli Grand Prix Du Canada in Montreal, Canada, on June 14, 2025. (Photo by Stefano Facchin/Alessio Morgese //NurPhoto) -
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F1 Grand Prix of Monaco - Qualifying
Max Verstappen of the team Oracle Red Bull Racing, Red Bull Honda RB21, faces the qualifying session during the FIA Formula One World Championship F1 Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo, Monaco, on May 24, 2025. (Photo by Luca Barsali/NurPhoto) -
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F1 Grand Prix of Monaco - Qualifying
Yuki Tsunoda of Team Oracle Red Bull Racing, Red Bull Honda RB21, is in the pit lane during the FIA Formula One World Championship F1 Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo, Monaco, on May 24, 2025. (Photo by Luca Barsali/NurPhoto) -
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F1 Grand Prix of Monaco - Qualifying
Max Verstappen of the team Oracle Red Bull Racing, Red Bull Honda RB21, faces the qualifying session during the FIA Formula One World Championship F1 Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo, Monaco, on May 24, 2025. (Photo by Luca Barsali/NurPhoto) -
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F1 Grand Prix of Monaco - Qualifying
Yuki Tsunoda of Team Oracle Red Bull Racing, Red Bull Honda RB21, participates in a practice session during the FIA Formula One World Championship F1 Monaco Grand Prix 2025 in Monte Carlo, Monaco, on May 24, 2025. (Photo by Luca Barsali/NurPhoto) -
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F1 Grand Prix of Monaco - Practice
Max Verstappen of the Oracle Red Bull Racing team, driving the Red Bull Honda RB21, participates in a practice session during the FIA Formula One World Championship F1 Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo, Monaco, on May 23, 2025. (Photo by Luca Barsali/NurPhoto) -
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F1 Grand Prix of Monaco - Practice
Max Verstappen of the Oracle Red Bull Racing team, driving the Red Bull Honda RB21, participates in a practice session during the FIA Formula One World Championship F1 Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo, Monaco, on May 23, 2025. (Photo by Luca Barsali/NurPhoto) -
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F1 Grand Prix of Monaco - Practice
Max Verstappen of the Oracle Red Bull Racing team, driving the Red Bull Honda RB21, participates in a practice session during the FIA Formula One World Championship F1 Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo, Monaco, on May 23, 2025. (Photo by Luca Barsali/NurPhoto) -
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F1 Grand Prix Of Miami - Race
Christian Horner speaks to his team in the Red Bull garage ahead of the Miami Grand Prix race at the Miami International Autodrome in Miami, Florida, on May 4, 2025. (Photo by Reginald Mathalone/NurPhoto) -
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F1 Grand Prix of Miami - Sprint & Qualifying
Max Verstappen of the Netherlands drives the Oracle Red Bull Racing RB21 Honda RBPT, and Dave Redding, team manager of Williams Racing, during the Formula 1 Crypto.Com Miami Grand Prix 2025 in Miami International Autodrome, Miami, USA, on May 3, 2025. (Photo by Hasan Bratic/Alessio Morgese/NurPhoto) -
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DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_011
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_010
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_009
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 13 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_008
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_007
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 10 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_006
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_005
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 10 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_004
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 10 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_003
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_002
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_001
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUKAS_181354088_EYE
Calum Nicholas: 'I'm trying to inspire people from all backgrounds to look at F1'
Calum Nicholas: 'I'm trying to inspire people from all backgrounds to look at F1'
'It can be quite intimidating being the only black guy,' says the Red Bull mechanic helping open up an overwhelmingly white business.
Calum Nicholas, the Red Bull Formula 1 senior technician, poses for a portrait on a starting grid interactive exhibit at the Silverstone Museum on February 7th 2025 in Northamptonshire, UK.
Tom Jenkins / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Tom Jenkins -
DUKAS_177497762_EYE
Rhiannan Iffland: from cruise ship entertainer to 'rock and roll of diving' star
Rhiannan Iffland the Australian cliff diver and face of the sport is set to be crowned an eight-time world champion in Sydney Harbour.
Rhiannan Iffland comes from a country where there are no suitable cliffs to practise, yet will shortly be crowned the world's best cliff diver for the eighth-straight time.
The 33-year-old is the face of the glitzy world high diving tour, and is sponsored by the globe’s biggest energy drink.
Seven time World Champion Cliff Diver Rhiannan Iffland at the Red Bull Cliff Diving site in Sydney, NSW, Australia
Blake Sharp-Wiggins / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_177497759_EYE
Rhiannan Iffland: from cruise ship entertainer to 'rock and roll of diving' star
Rhiannan Iffland the Australian cliff diver and face of the sport is set to be crowned an eight-time world champion in Sydney Harbour.
Rhiannan Iffland comes from a country where there are no suitable cliffs to practise, yet will shortly be crowned the world's best cliff diver for the eighth-straight time.
The 33-year-old is the face of the glitzy world high diving tour, and is sponsored by the globe’s biggest energy drink.
Seven time World Champion Cliff Diver Rhiannan Iffland at the Red Bull Cliff Diving site in Sydney, NSW, Australia
Blake Sharp-Wiggins / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_177497760_EYE
Rhiannan Iffland: from cruise ship entertainer to 'rock and roll of diving' star
Rhiannan Iffland the Australian cliff diver and face of the sport is set to be crowned an eight-time world champion in Sydney Harbour.
Rhiannan Iffland comes from a country where there are no suitable cliffs to practise, yet will shortly be crowned the world's best cliff diver for the eighth-straight time.
The 33-year-old is the face of the glitzy world high diving tour, and is sponsored by the globe’s biggest energy drink.
Seven time World Champion Cliff Diver Rhiannan Iffland at the Red Bull Cliff Diving site in Sydney, NSW, Australia
Blake Sharp-Wiggins / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_177497761_EYE
Rhiannan Iffland: from cruise ship entertainer to 'rock and roll of diving' star
Rhiannan Iffland the Australian cliff diver and face of the sport is set to be crowned an eight-time world champion in Sydney Harbour.
Rhiannan Iffland comes from a country where there are no suitable cliffs to practise, yet will shortly be crowned the world's best cliff diver for the eighth-straight time.
The 33-year-old is the face of the glitzy world high diving tour, and is sponsored by the globe’s biggest energy drink.
Seven time World Champion Cliff Diver Rhiannan Iffland at the Red Bull Cliff Diving site in Sydney, NSW, Australia
Blake Sharp-Wiggins / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_177214370_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214368_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214366_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214365_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214363_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214361_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214359_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214357_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214354_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214352_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214350_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214349_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214344_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177214342_BES
Peter Salzmann a établi de nouveaux records du monde avec un vol en wingsuit foil sur la montagne suisse de la Jungfrau
Picture MUST credit: Red Bull A base jumper has made history by leaping from a mountain top with an aerofoil. Red Bull sponsored Peter Salzmann used the board with his wing-suit, the one-piece nylon garment that creates lift and allows for horizontal gliding and controlled flight. This time the wing-suit had electric power to control the foil. Austrian-born Salzmann ,37, developed aerofoil with another wing-suit jumper, Andreas Podlipnik. Salzmann then used it to smash several base records when jumped from a 4,050 metre-high ledge at Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps on October 24 this year. He flew for 5 minutes 56 seconds, at 200 mph for 12.47 in free, unpowered flight to smash existing BASE jumping records. He eventually deployed his parachute saying he was too exhausted to continue. Base jumping is the recreational sport of jumping from fixed objects, using a parachute, or wing-suit. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_171334381_LAP
Protest against the F1 road show
Neighborhood protest against the celebration of the F1 road show in the center of Barcelona, demanding that major events like this or the America's Cup be stopped. The demonstration, heavily guarded by the police who blocked their passage, proceeded calmly.
Protesta vecinal contra la celebraci—n del road show de la F1 en el centro de Barcelona, reclamando que paren los grandes eventos como este o la Copa AmŽrica. La manifestaci—n, fuertemente custodiada por la polic’a que les impidi— el paso, transcurri— con tranquilidad.
In the pic:
News politics -Barcelona, Spain
wednesday, june 19 2024 (Photo by Eric Renom/LaPresse)
Eric Renom/LaPresse -
DUKAS_171334380_LAP
Protest against the F1 road show
Neighborhood protest against the celebration of the F1 road show in the center of Barcelona, demanding that major events like this or the America's Cup be stopped. The demonstration, heavily guarded by the police who blocked their passage, proceeded calmly.
Protesta vecinal contra la celebraci—n del road show de la F1 en el centro de Barcelona, reclamando que paren los grandes eventos como este o la Copa AmŽrica. La manifestaci—n, fuertemente custodiada por la polic’a que les impidi— el paso, transcurri— con tranquilidad.
In the pic:
News politics -Barcelona, Spain
wednesday, june 19 2024 (Photo by Eric Renom/LaPresse)
Eric Renom/LaPresse -
DUKAS_171334379_LAP
Protest against the F1 road show
Neighborhood protest against the celebration of the F1 road show in the center of Barcelona, demanding that major events like this or the America's Cup be stopped. The demonstration, heavily guarded by the police who blocked their passage, proceeded calmly.
Protesta vecinal contra la celebraci—n del road show de la F1 en el centro de Barcelona, reclamando que paren los grandes eventos como este o la Copa AmŽrica. La manifestaci—n, fuertemente custodiada por la polic’a que les impidi— el paso, transcurri— con tranquilidad.
In the pic:
News politics -Barcelona, Spain
wednesday, june 19 2024 (Photo by Eric Renom/LaPresse)
Eric Renom/LaPresse -
DUKAS_171334378_LAP
Protest against the F1 road show
Neighborhood protest against the celebration of the F1 road show in the center of Barcelona, demanding that major events like this or the America's Cup be stopped. The demonstration, heavily guarded by the police who blocked their passage, proceeded calmly.
Protesta vecinal contra la celebraci—n del road show de la F1 en el centro de Barcelona, reclamando que paren los grandes eventos como este o la Copa AmŽrica. La manifestaci—n, fuertemente custodiada por la polic’a que les impidi— el paso, transcurri— con tranquilidad.
In the pic:
News politics -Barcelona, Spain
wednesday, june 19 2024 (Photo by Eric Renom/LaPresse)
Eric Renom/LaPresse -
DUKAS_171334377_LAP
Protest against the F1 road show
Neighborhood protest against the celebration of the F1 road show in the center of Barcelona, demanding that major events like this or the America's Cup be stopped. The demonstration, heavily guarded by the police who blocked their passage, proceeded calmly.
Protesta vecinal contra la celebraci—n del road show de la F1 en el centro de Barcelona, reclamando que paren los grandes eventos como este o la Copa AmŽrica. La manifestaci—n, fuertemente custodiada por la polic’a que les impidi— el paso, transcurri— con tranquilidad.
In the pic:
News politics -Barcelona, Spain
wednesday, june 19 2024 (Photo by Eric Renom/LaPresse)
Eric Renom/LaPresse -
DUKAS_171334376_LAP
Protest against the F1 road show
Neighborhood protest against the celebration of the F1 road show in the center of Barcelona, demanding that major events like this or the America's Cup be stopped. The demonstration, heavily guarded by the police who blocked their passage, proceeded calmly.
Protesta vecinal contra la celebraci—n del road show de la F1 en el centro de Barcelona, reclamando que paren los grandes eventos como este o la Copa AmŽrica. La manifestaci—n, fuertemente custodiada por la polic’a que les impidi— el paso, transcurri— con tranquilidad.
In the pic:
News politics -Barcelona, Spain
wednesday, june 19 2024 (Photo by Eric Renom/LaPresse)
Eric Renom/LaPresse -
DUKAS_171334375_LAP
Protest against the F1 road show
Neighborhood protest against the celebration of the F1 road show in the center of Barcelona, demanding that major events like this or the America's Cup be stopped. The demonstration, heavily guarded by the police who blocked their passage, proceeded calmly.
Protesta vecinal contra la celebraci—n del road show de la F1 en el centro de Barcelona, reclamando que paren los grandes eventos como este o la Copa AmŽrica. La manifestaci—n, fuertemente custodiada por la polic’a que les impidi— el paso, transcurri— con tranquilidad.
In the pic:
News politics -Barcelona, Spain
wednesday, june 19 2024 (Photo by Eric Renom/LaPresse)
Eric Renom/LaPresse -
DUKAS_171334374_LAP
Protest against the F1 road show
Neighborhood protest against the celebration of the F1 road show in the center of Barcelona, demanding that major events like this or the America's Cup be stopped. The demonstration, heavily guarded by the police who blocked their passage, proceeded calmly.
Protesta vecinal contra la celebraci—n del road show de la F1 en el centro de Barcelona, reclamando que paren los grandes eventos como este o la Copa AmŽrica. La manifestaci—n, fuertemente custodiada por la polic’a que les impidi— el paso, transcurri— con tranquilidad.
In the pic:
News politics -Barcelona, Spain
wednesday, june 19 2024 (Photo by Eric Renom/LaPresse)
Eric Renom/LaPresse -
DUKAS_171334372_LAP
Protest against the F1 road show
Neighborhood protest against the celebration of the F1 road show in the center of Barcelona, demanding that major events like this or the America's Cup be stopped. The demonstration, heavily guarded by the police who blocked their passage, proceeded calmly.
Protesta vecinal contra la celebraci—n del road show de la F1 en el centro de Barcelona, reclamando que paren los grandes eventos como este o la Copa AmŽrica. La manifestaci—n, fuertemente custodiada por la polic’a que les impidi— el paso, transcurri— con tranquilidad.
In the pic:
News politics -Barcelona, Spain
wednesday, june 19 2024 (Photo by Eric Renom/LaPresse)
Eric Renom/LaPresse