Every tennis court cracks. The question isn’t if, but when; and more importantly, whether you’ll keep throwing money at patches that don’t hold, or invest once in repairs that actually work.
The most expensive pattern we see? Facilities spending year after year on quick fixes, scrambling before events, then facing the same cracks again. After five years, many facilities have spent ...
Managing public tennis courts means dealing with ADA compliance. Here's how to handle it without overspending or overthinking.
What matters: which requirements actually apply, when to address them, and when you're making this harder than it needs to be.
Quick context: Pro Track & Tennis resurfaces and rebuilds courts. We don't do standalone ADA retrofits, but we handle ...
Here’s the part nobody likes to admit: weather always wins. The impact of weather on your courts can mean the difference between spending a few hundred a year to stay ahead, or a few thousand a year to play catch-up. The difference is knowing how weather attacks your courts, what to do about it, and when to stop paying for the same repair twice.
Quick note: Pro Track & Tennis ...
Here’s what nobody tells you about tennis court maintenance: Make sure to refer to the tennis court maintenance checklist. Most facilities are either spending a few hundred a year to stay ahead, or a few thousand a year reacting to problems. The difference is about 15 minutes a day and knowing when to stop throwing good money after bad.
This guide shows you what to do daily, weekly, ...
The surface beneath a tennis player's feet influences every aspect of their game, from confidence in aggressive shots to how their body feels after hours of play. Choosing the right tennis court surface is one of the most important decisions facility managers face, as it directly affects performance, comfort, safety, and long-term value.
With hard courts now accounting for over 60% of ...
A pickleball tennis court conversion is one of the most cost-effective facility upgrades you can make right now. If your tennis courts are underused and pickleball demand is growing at your facility, a conversion is worth a serious look. One tennis court can support multiple pickleball courts. The process is faster and less expensive than most facility managers expect. And when it's done ...