Heelys: Innovation on wheels
“Many amateur inventors dream of creating a million-dollar
product in the garage, but usually the only thing that ever comes out of that
garage is the family car. Roger Adams, the creator of a new kind of skate-shoe,
beat the odds…
In the fall 1998, he was sitting on a friend’s porch in
Manhattan Beach, Calif., watching roller skaters, skateboarders and bicyclists
on the boardwalk, thinking back to a “happier, simpler time” at his family’s
roller rink. That led him to an idea. “It occurred to me that all those things
— roller skates, skateboards, bikes — had been around for a hundred years,” he
says. “It seemed to me that there had to be some new way to have fun on wheels.”
His friend had a workshop in his garage. He heated up a butter
knife and began cutting apart some Nike sneakers and experimenting with metal
balls and wheels. He “cannibalized at least four pairs” of sneakers in the first
few hours. He tried them repeatedly and kept falling until he accidentally
discovered the proper stance — one foot in front of the other to maintain
balance.
“I had a concept. I wanted the wearer to be able to walk
normally and then roll,” he says. “There is a stealth nature to Heelys. When you
see a kid wearing them, you wouldn’t know there’s a wheel in the sneaker until
they started to roll.”
[image: Heelys]