There is something different about STR!DE. It is not just the scale of the thing, though it is wild to think about a grassroots parkour jam occupying a full blown Adidas compound in the heart of Berlin. It is the intention behind it. STR!DE is not about high pressure competition or just showcasing big names. It is about joy. It is about creating something that invites people in, keeps them engaged, and builds a community around shared experience.

This year, I was not able to attend in person, but I wanted to understand what really went into an event that so many people talk about with nothing but love. So I sent over one of our trusted creatives, Ivaylo, behind the lens to document what makes STR!DE Berlin so unique. Alongside the visuals, we also sent out a set of questions to the organisers and a few athletes to get under the skin of the event, to dig into the motivations, the stress, the heart, and the energy behind what has quickly become one of the most distinctive events in the parkour calendar.

What came back was a story of burnout, uncertainty, and last minute breakthroughs. But more than that, it was a story about what happens when people build something real. Something that reflects the heart of the scene and gives it space to breathe.

The atmosphere at STR!DE Berlin 2025, athletes and spectators gathered at the Adidas Sports Base

The Origin Story: From Birthday Jam to Global Gathering

What started as a casual idea between friends, a way for Silky and Louke to celebrate their birthdays with a street jam and a party, has grown into one of the most well respected parkour events in Europe. STR!DE was not designed to be a big production from the beginning. The first year, it was just meant to be fun. A gathering with music, a few games, and some food. But when over a hundred people from across the globe showed up, including athletes from the US, Australia, South Africa, and all over Europe, something clicked.

They realised this was bigger than a birthday bash. This was a platform. And it had potential.

The STR!DE community gathering, athletes connecting between sessions at the Berlin festival

From that point on, the intention shifted. STR!DE became about more than just movement. It became about connection.

"We didn't want to go down the classic route with competitions that put athletes under pressure. We wanted to create an atmosphere where people feel invited to join activities, where there's always something fun to do."

— Louke, STR!DE Co-Founder

That philosophy still runs through the event today. Whether it is joining a pole slide workshop with Joe Scandrett, checking in with an on site physio, or just hanging out on the grass playing cards and chatting between sessions, STR!DE is designed to let people move how they want to move, vibe how they want to vibe.

It is a parkour festival in the truest sense. And every bit of it is built with intention.

3 Days
100+ Athletes
6+ Countries
1 Adidas Compound

Planning and Pressure: What It Took to Make STR!DE 2025 Happen

You do not often hear organisers talk openly about burnout, but Louke and Silky do not shy away from it. After STR!DE 2024, they were wrecked. Emotionally, physically, mentally. Silky had an emotional breakdown. Louke completely neglected his need for rest. It led to sleep disorders and proper burnout.

For a while, they were not even sure they would do it again. The idea of running STR!DE 2025 was left hanging until March, just three months before the event. That is when they made the decision to go for it. Even then, things were far from smooth. Sponsorship came in late. Ticket sales were slow. Costs were up. At one point they were deep in the red and genuinely considered calling the whole thing off.

Athletic parkour movement captured at STR!DE Berlin 2025

But piece by piece, things started falling into place. The Adidas Sports Base was available. Past sponsors returned. They found a cheaper way to transport their massive obstacle setup, and even secured a year long storage deal for it.

"The universe kind of gave us signs to keep going."

— Louke, STR!DE Co-Founder

Still, those last two weeks before the event were brutal. Twelve to fourteen hour days. Sorting staff. Accommodations. DJ sets. Redesigning the venue. Making sure every detail was covered, right down to free sunscreen and water pistols.

What a lot of people saw on the day was sunshine and movement. What they did not see was the weight of putting it all together. The kind of pressure only organisers understand.

STR!DE might look effortless from the outside. But make no mistake, it is the product of real graft, stubborn belief, and love for the culture.

A Festival Built for Everyone

One of the most refreshing things about STR!DE is that it refuses to be boxed in. It is not just a jam. It is not just a comp. And it is definitely not just for elite athletes. The whole event is built around the idea of participation without pressure, and that is where the real magic comes from.

From the outside, STR!DE looks like a packed three day schedule of competitions, workshops, and sessions which it is. But what really sets it apart is the stuff in between. The festival atmosphere. The mini Olympics. The random games on the basketball court. The way beginners and veterans end up sitting side by side on the sidelines, laughing at the chaos or cheering each other on.

Athletic bounce movement at the STR!DE Berlin parkour festival Parkour athlete in motion during STR!DE Berlin 2025 sessions

There were workshops with some of the best movers in the scene, including ground movement sessions from Bastian Dratva and pole slide training with Joe Scandrett. There was even an open physio station for people to get treatment mid event. But there were also softer, sillier moments. A Playstation set up in the shade. Tattoos. Food trucks. A screening of Gate Crasher, a women's only parkour film. People playing cards in the sun.

Even the competitions were built differently. Rather than piling on pressure, STR!DE's knock out format meant anyone could take part. The Highest Flip and Biggest STR!DE comps started simple. Beginners could give it a go. But by the final rounds, the level was sky high and the crowd was locked in.

This year, the Biggest STR!DE contest ended with Max Ward and Oskee going head to head. The kind of match up that had everyone shouting through megaphones, drinks in hand, sun blazing overhead. Proper parkour summer energy.

Whether you came to push yourself or just hang out, there was something for everyone. And that was not an accident. That was by design.

Behind the Setup: Building the Playground

One of the wildest things about STR!DE 2025 is that the entire physical setup, the scaffolding, the platforms, the signature STR!DE obstacle park, very nearly did not exist. And if you have seen photos from the event, you will know that setup made the space.

The STR!DE obstacle park setup, scaffolding and platforms at the Adidas Sports Base Athletes training on the STR!DE obstacle park during the Berlin festival

The park itself was originally designed back in 2019 for a PK Skillz competition by Ashigaru, and it had been sitting in storage 600km away from Berlin. This year, Louke and Silky were given the chance to claim it permanently. The only catch? They had to figure out how to move and store several tons of steel and wood without any major backing, all while planning the rest of the event.

Neither of them had ever dealt with logistics on that level before. They called around, chased quotes, lost sleep.

"It was a seriously heavy game of Tetris. Both to fit the park in the trucks, and to find somewhere in Berlin to store it after."

— Louke, STR!DE Co-Founder

Eventually, they pulled it off. They worked contacts from Louke's stunt background, finding a stunt team warehouse with just enough space to house the structure post event. Five weeks before the start date, they locked it in.

That obstacle park became the heart of the jam. It gave the competitions a proper stage and gave athletes the freedom to move in creative, expressive ways. And the fact that it almost did not happen makes what they achieved even more impressive.

The Vibe from the Inside: Athlete Perspectives

To really understand what STR!DE feels like, you need to hear it from the athletes. From the people in the thick of it, moving, laughing, recovering, connecting.

Josh Dohy at STR!DE Berlin 2025

Josh Dohy, who made the trip over from North America, summed up the vibe in a way that stuck with me.

"STR!DE excels in having everything in its own little microcosm. You don't really need to leave the place. It's got a cheeky spirit to it with all its offerings."

— Josh Dohy

There is a feeling that everything has been considered. Not in a corporate, polished way, but in a done with care kind of way. Josh mentioned chilling in the sun, watching the Highest Flip and Biggest STR!DE contests, and how some of the best moments were the ones in between. Card games, people watching, weird energy from the picnic benches, laughter during the yoga class.

STR!DE does not just make room for fun. It builds it into the blueprint.

Josh Dohy on the microphone at the STR!DE Berlin competition

Even in competition, there is a different energy. Josh admitted he did not perform how he wanted, but that honesty only adds to the experience. It is not about perfection. It is about showing up.

Workshops were another standout. Bastian's ground movement session offered space for low impact creativity, something Josh appreciated after tweaking his knee before the event.

"With all these new moves, I could explore stuff that didn't flare it up."

— Josh Dohy

And that speaks to what STR!DE gets right. It gives athletes the space to listen to their body, to push when they want, and pull back when they need. It is training, but on your terms.

There is no pressure to be the best. Just an open invitation to be part of it.

Community, Gratitude and Looking Forward

Spectators and community members watching the STR!DE Berlin 2025 competitions

If there is one thing that echoes through every answer we received, it is this: STR!DE Berlin is built on heart. It is run by people from the community, for the community, and you can feel that in every corner of the event. Whether you were landing your biggest move, chilling in the shade with a drink, or screaming encouragement through a megaphone during finals, you were part of it.

For Louke and Silky, the gratitude was overwhelming. Dozens of people came up to them over the weekend just to say thank you. To acknowledge the work. To let them know how much it meant.

"We manage a budget of roughly €20,000 to make the event as good as possible. We get to take over a location like the Adidas Sports Base in Berlin and work with brands like Adidas, Nissan, Jever, and Jabra but it's all still run by the community."

— Louke, STR!DE Co-Founder

That balance, professional level execution with grassroots soul, is what makes STR!DE special. It is not trying to be something else. It knows what it is.

Looking forward, Louke and Silky are still figuring out what comes next. They have got two options on the table. Either go smaller, more intimate, and community focused, or scale up with a bigger team and chase more backing. Both have pros and cons. But right now, they are taking time to reset. To reflect. To recover from the madness of making it all happen again.

Whatever direction they choose, one thing is clear: STR!DE is not just an event. It is a blueprint for what parkour gatherings can look like when they are done with care, creativity, and love for the culture.

And from where I am standing, it is exactly the kind of energy our community needs more of.

Gallery

Photography by @ivoerev · Words by Breach Culture

Event by @stride.brln · Organised by @loukewilson & @silky.zigzag

A huge thank you to Louke and Silke for having us at the event and letting us feature it on the site. STR!DE looked like an incredible event and we hope it is a huge success this year. All the best from Chris and the team.