PARK COURTS FOR UTAH VALLEY'S ACTIVE COMMUNITIES
Springville, Spanish Fork, Pleasant Grove, and Lindon parks departments are adding pickleball courts to meet growing community demand. We help parks teams build them right the first time.
WHY CHOOSE PICKLED COURT FOR PARKS COURTS
Utah County's trusted pickleball court builder. We understand what your venue type demands — here's why clients across Provo, Orem, Lehi, and the valley trust us to get it right.
All-Weather Utah Valley Surfaces
Park courts in Utah County face summer UV, winter freeze-thaw, and shoulder season wet weather. Our acrylic systems are rated for all of it without surface degradation.
Multi-Sport Ready
Utah County parks serve every age group. We stripe courts for pickleball plus tennis, basketball, or badminton to maximize the return on your parks footprint.
Parks Department Process
We understand how Utah County parks departments work — capital budget timelines, parks committee approvals, and phased builds that keep parks open during construction.
Low Maintenance for Parks Crews
Utah County parks teams are busy. We design surfaces that drain properly, resist UV fading, and require minimal maintenance between your seasonal crew rotations.
WHAT'S INCLUDED
Every parks courts project in Utah County includes the following scope as standard. No hidden line items, no surprise add-ons.
- Site survey and drainage planning
- Multi-court layout optimization
- Commercial acrylic surfacing system
- Multi-sport line striping (pickleball + tennis option)
- Net post systems with locking hardware
- Perimeter fencing and windscreen options
- Shade structure coordination
TIMELINE & PROCESS
Utah County parks projects are typically phased to keep partial courts open during construction. Multi-court complexes run 3–8 weeks.
OUR WORK
Every court we build in Utah County is engineered to perform and designed to impress. See what that looks like in practice.



COMMON QUESTIONS
Answers to the questions Utah County parks courts clients ask most often.
Can we add pickleball to an existing tennis court in our Utah County park?
Yes — tennis-to-pickleball conversion or dual-sport striping is one of the most cost-effective upgrades Utah County parks can make. We handle the surface overlay and striping.
How do parks courts hold up to Utah County summers?
Our UV-stabilized acrylic systems resist fading and surface softening even in Utah Valley's intense summer heat, and maintain consistent ball bounce throughout the season.
Do you work with Utah County parks capital budgets?
We can work with your capital budget cycle and provide itemized estimates that support grant applications to Utah's state recreation programs.
What fencing height is recommended for Utah County park courts?
We recommend 10-foot fencing for parks pickleball courts — high enough to keep balls contained and reduce interruptions from adjacent trail and park activity.
READY TO BUILD IN UTAH COUNTY?
Tell us about your parks courtsproject in Utah County and we'll get back to you with a site-specific proposal.