Adidas Skateboarding Glenburn Tour UK
Written By Samantha Bache
Grab your calendars, because Adidas Skateboarding is loading up the van and hitting the road across England this July for the Glenburn On Tour, stopping at six of the country's most respected independent skate shops.
The tour is built around the brand's new Glenburn shoe — a low-key, "wear it with anything" silhouette that adidas is calling a blank canvas for skaters to make their own. Rather than just dropping the shoe online and calling it a day, adidas is doing it properly: taking the team to independent skate shops up and down the country for meet-ups, sessions, and a first look at the new kicks in person.
Meet the Riders
Adidas have sent out a proper crew for this one — a serious spread of styles from all over the world.
Dennis Busenitz
Basically adidas Skateboarding royalty. Turned pro for Real Skateboards in 2002 and has anchored adidas's team since 2006 — his signature Busenitz Pro is still one of the most recognisable shoes in skateboarding. Powerful, all-terrain style, two Tampa Pro wins.
Riley Hawk
Yes, that Hawk — son of Tony — but Riley's built his own lane on smooth, technical street skating. Turned pro in 2013 on his 21st birthday, the same day he won Skateboarder Magazine's Amateur of the Year. Fluid on rails, ledges and stairs.
Vincent Milou
One of France's biggest exports: a two-time Olympian, former Street League podium regular, and European FISE champion. Stylish and technical in equal measure, recently signed to adidas's global team.
Lawrence Ravail
From Reunion Island's small but heavy skate scene before relocating to mainland France. Powerful, technical, big ledge combos — the next generation coming through adidas's ranks.
Sam Narvaez
Pro for the legendary Krooked Skateboards and one of the brand's most exciting recent additions. Sharp eye for spots, serious technical ability, and a clear love of just having fun on a board.
Gustav Tønnesen
Norway's "your favourite skater's favourite skater" — a cult following built through Sour Skateboards' output and an effortless, fluid approach to gnarly obstacles.
Shin Sanbongi
One of Japan's most respected exports, joining adidas in 2020 after making his name through Pontus Alv's Polar Skate Co. Smooth, flowing style, and the first Japanese skater to headline a global adidas shoe release.
The Shoe Behind the Tour
The whole tour is built around adidas Skateboarding's newest silhouette, the Glenburn — and it's worth knowing what the fuss is about before it lands at a shop near you.
adidas describes the Glenburn as a "universal approach," blending classic adidas styling with skate culture and a wide colour palette designed to pair with pretty much anything. The construction backs that up: a dual-layered full-suede front panel, a breathable nylon rear-quarter panel, and a plimsole-inspired outsole built for grip and board feel, with the kind of "broken in" comfort usually reserved for shoes you've had for months.
The shoe's already landed in a handful of colourways, with team riders like Daewon Song and Mark Suciu putting it through its paces on camera ahead of the wider release. At £75/$75, it sits comfortably in "proper skate shoe" pricing without tipping into premium territory — which tracks with the whole vibe of this tour: independent shops, real skaters, and a shoe designed to just get worn in and skated hard.
The Dates
The tour is stopping at independent shops across England, each one a cornerstone of its local scene:
Manchester — Note Skateshop, 21st July
Leeds — Welcome Skate Store, 22nd July
Derby — Rollersnakes, 23rd July
Brighton — Flatspot, 26th July
Bristol — Route One, 28th July
London — Slam City Skates, 29th–30th July
Note Skateshop — Manchester
A Manchester institution since 1999, now settled on Thomas Street in the Northern Quarter after years on Tib Street and a spell in Afflecks Palace.
On the day: Head to NOTE on Thomas Street from 2pm for a team signing with Dennis Busenitz, Riley Hawk, Vincent Milou, Lawrence Ravail, Sam Narvaez, Gustav Tønnesen, Tim Debauche and Shin Sanbongi, followed by a skate jam from 4pm right outside the shop — complete with a unique obstacle set-up, prizes and giveaways.
Welcome Skate Store — Leeds
Skater-owned and run, widely regarded as one of the strongest "core" shops in the country, based in Thorntons Arcade and a hub for the wider Yorkshire scene.
On the day: Big team shop visit and jam on 22nd July — meet and greet at the shop from 2–3pm, followed by a demo and jam at Hyde from 4pm.
Rollersnakes — Derby
The UK's original skateboard and streetwear store, open in Derby since 1985. Its Nottingham branch once hosted Mark Gonzales and Eric Dressen on an indoor mini ramp, and Derby HQ still has its own free-to-use skatepark on site.
On the day: Demo and signing session with Busenitz, Milou, Riley Hawk, Tønnesen, Sanbongi and more, open to the public, no booking, starting around midday. First ten buyers of the Glenburn shoe get a free limited-edition adidas x Rollersnakes football jersey, plus a wider giveaway of adidas gear throughout the day.
Flatspot — Brighton
Started life in Plymouth in 1995 and opened its own skatepark soon after — a well-established South West name now tapping into Brighton's tight-knit scene.
Route One — Bristol
One of the biggest names in UK skate retail, with ten stores nationwide. Its Bristol shop sits right by Dean Lane, one of the country's oldest and most notorious skateparks.
On the day: In-store signing at Route One Bristol on Tuesday 28th July, followed by a demo and jam at Dean Lane with a load of prizes up for grabs. Confirmed riders include Dennis Busenitz, Riley Hawk, Vincent Milou, Gustav Tønnesen and Shin Sanbongi.
Slam City Skates — London
The oldest skate shop in Europe, opened in 1986 out of the basement of Rough Trade Records — nearly four decades at the centre of British skateboarding.
On the day: Team signing at the shop on Wednesday 29th July, 6–7pm, followed by a Southbank jam on Thursday 30th July, 4–6pm. Confirmed riders include Dennis Busenitz, Riley Hawk, Vincent Milou, Lawrence Ravail, Gustav Tønnesen, Sam Narvaez and Shin Sanbongi, joined by UK riders Chewy Cannon, Dan Fisher-Eustance and Tom Snape.
Should You Go?
If you're anywhere near one of these six cities on the relevant date, this is worth the trip. Shop tour stops like this tend to be low-key by design — no barriers, no big production, just skaters, a shop that's earned its place in the scene, and a chance to see the new gear in person before it's all over Instagram. Six shops, six cities — a proper nationwide moment rather than a one-off in a single city.
Keep an eye on each shop's channels for timings, and we'll see you there.