The martial art you are looking for is Parkour.
Well in both you need to be fast and efficient and aware of whats going on around you like cars or people and in martial arts you need to be aware of what your opponent is doing and where they are. In both you need to have strength in your arms legs arms stomach and back. In parkour you have the risk of getting hurt easily but in martial arts there is no jumping off buildings on to concrete and parkour is a type of martial art. conditioning for both is a lot of work.
yes. parkour is technicly (?) martial arts, the art of getting outta there.
he was a load of bulk.
I don't think there is such thing as Parkour Dance. You might be referring to Tricking, which is a mix of martial arts and gymnastics, where the trickers (or tricksters) combine kicks and flips to make a really cool looking thing. As far as I know there is no such thing as Parkour Dancing.
Lake Charles Parkour has classes. The school is located inside Guzzy's Gymnastics so you have plenty of space and equipment to learn with. There is over 17,000 square feet of training area with two olympic size spring loaded floors. For more information search up: Lake Charles Martial Arts.
Anywhere and everywhere. There is no specified place to train in parkour; your environment and surroundings are your training-ground.
A website that describes various elements of individual performance - speed, strength, intelligence, productivity, agility etc and how to improve them. Contains many articles on underground training techniques, bodybuilding, parkour, martial arts and transhumanism.Go to http://www.the-biomatrix.net
The Parkour training discipline is no longer reserved for the extremist.
No. It is not a fighting technique. That being said, in a more general sense (and not a sense that people ever use the term "martial arts"), there is a potential martial (military) value to parkor. There is overlap between the two where breaking falls and rolling are concerned.
International Parkour Day is an annual event celebrated on the first Sunday of April. It is a day dedicated to promoting and raising awareness about the sport of parkour. Practitioners from all over the world organize gatherings, workshops, training sessions, and other parkour-related activities to showcase the discipline and connect with fellow practitioners.
Free-running is almost a martial art, that is based off of the French art of parkour. Parkour has it's roots in WWI and WWII, as some of the training for the French military. Free-running became what it is most recognized as today around the 1960's until the late 1990's.