skateability
n. The extent to which an object or area is suitable for skateboarding.
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2014
The fall of 2002 the city closed LOVE Park for a renovation to add features that would reduce the "skateability" of the Park. City youths hosted a massive protest against the renovation.
—Jennifer Hensell, “Love Park Philadelphia,” Free Tours By Foot, August 23, 2014
2013
Their second powerful argument for rejecting the new skate site and the funds to make it fit their purposes is that iconic skate spaces are found, indeed taken. Such places are not offered and certainly not designed.

And yet within the last decade, the Southbank Centre got planning permission on behalf of the skateboarders to improve the skateability of the existing space.
—Jude Kelly, “Southbank skateboarders must see the big picture,” Evening Standard, June 07, 2013
2011
Since its inception, the park has undergone subtle revisions, including the addition of a brick-layered bank accompanied by small ledges that skaters can roll up to, grind, and stall on. But it's next, grander phase calls on Seattle-based Grindline to provide a new master plan for the park to maximize so-called "skateability" and overall aesthetic appeal.
—Trevor Villagrana, “Plans for New Rhodes Skate Park to be Discussed,” Boise Weekly, June 11, 2011
2002 (earliest)
I spotted a couple of twenty-something year-old skaters ollieing off a ramp next to the massive bronze equestrian statue of Belgium's King Albert I, which stands between two skateable sets of stone steps…

While the skatepark is not huge and some skaters might want more vert than is on offer, what is great about it is how it's almost seamlessly integrated into the surrounding streetscape with its open plan and discreet skateability.
—Greg Fewer, “Longboard skateboarding in East Waterford, Ireland: A personal view,” OoCities, April 09, 2002