Skating sports have dominated the field of studies in human and social sciences on sportsleisure practices for a long time, particularly because of their visibility in cities by the establishment of open spaces: skate parks. However, since the 1990s, these activities that invest urban spaces are diversifying. Parkour is one of them and presents the originality of questioning the (skate and/or parkour) parks as it is an urban planning tool because he also experiences, henceforth, the development of open and public facilities dedicated to this activity. Based on a literature review and a study conducted in Rennes and Nantes, we question this fact of the park and show that, beyond its urban planning issues, it constitutes (1) a lever of the emergence of renewed youth citizenship; and (2) a vehicle for building a not only sporty, but more broadly recreational, urbanity.