His original career path was headed toward accounting and a CPA designation, and at the time he was working as a controller while taking on bookkeeping clients on the side. A reconnection with Reimer – someone he had known years earlier – led to an initial bookkeeping role that quickly grew into something more. “After about six months, we realized our skill sets fit really well together,” Colton explains. “Tim was feeling the pressure of trying to manage both the office side and all the on-site responsibilities. It made sense for me to take over sales, design, project management, and finance, while he focused on operations and building.” That division of responsibilities helped unlock the company’s next phase of growth. By moving fully to cast-in-place construction, Drop In Skateparks streamlined their build process and expanded the range of projects it could take on. Today, the company builds parks that range from roughly 2,000 square feet to more than 18,000 square feet of concrete surface, with no hard limits on project size. “There’s really no project that’s too small for us,” Colton says. “Some communities we work with have populations of 500 people or less. We’re happy to partner with them, even if it takes two, three, or four years of fundraising before a park is built.” That long-term commitment is one of the company’s defining characteristics. Drop In Skateparks often begins working with FEBRUARY 2026
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