HOA Sport Court Installation in Marana
Multi-court builds designed for board approval. We handle the Pima County permit, the HOA submittal package, and the caliche excavation — your board gets a complete specification set, not a sales pitch.
Serving HOA communities throughout Marana and the Tucson metro. See all Marana services →
The HOA Approval Process, Step by Step
Marana HOA boards move deliberately — and they should. Here is exactly how we move a community sport court project from first conversation to ribbon cutting.
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1
Site Assessment
We walk the proposed court area, probe for caliche depth, check grade and drainage, and measure against your HOA's setback rules. No fee, no obligation.
1–2 hours on site -
2
Specification Package
We produce stamped site drawings, court layout options, SportMaster color chips, fencing and windscreen specs, a maintenance schedule, and a 10-year surface warranty summary — formatted for board review.
7–10 business days -
3
Board Presentation
We attend the HOA meeting in person or by video, walk the board through the spec package, and answer technical questions directly. Boards that receive a complete submittal rarely require a second meeting.
Scheduled around your board calendar -
4
Pima County Permit
After board approval, we file the building permit application with Pima County. Permit fees run $150–$400 depending on scope. You provide a current property survey — we handle all submissions and follow-up.
2–4 weeks for permit issuance -
5
Construction
Caliche excavation, compacted aggregate base, concrete pour (scheduled to avoid peak summer heat), SportMaster surface system, line striping, fencing, and lighting. Final walkthrough with the board before closeout.
3–8 weeks depending on court count
What Your Board Receives
Every HOA project includes a complete documentation package. Nothing handed off mid-process — the board has everything it needs before a vote is ever called.
Stamped Site Drawings
Dimensioned plan view showing court layout, setbacks, fencing perimeter, and drainage flow. Formatted for Pima County and HOA records.
Surface Color Samples
Physical SportMaster color chips — not digital renderings. Earth tones like sandstone and slate move through Marana HOA reviews faster than bright primaries.
Fence & Windscreen Specs
Chain link gauge, post spacing, windscreen mesh density, and gate hardware — specified so the board knows exactly what will be installed.
10-Year Maintenance Plan
Annual pressure wash schedule, resurfacing intervals (typically 8–12 years), and line repaint intervals. Helps boards budget accurately in the HOA reserve fund.
Warranty Documentation
SportMaster surface warranty and our workmanship warranty in writing, assigned to the HOA entity — not to an individual homeowner.
Lighting Specifications
LED pole-mount specs with foot-candle levels at playing surface, light spill diagrams for neighboring properties, and estimated operating cost per month.
Court Types for Marana Communities
HOA amenity areas work hardest when courts serve multiple resident groups. Here are the configurations we build most often in Marana.
Pickleball Courts
Side-by-side layouts. Four courts fit in approximately the same footprint as one tennis court — maximum resident usage per square foot.
Tennis Courts
Full 78-foot courts with windscreens and optional pickleball overlay — one surface, two sports, broader resident appeal.
Basketball Courts
Half-court and full-court options. Pairs well with pickleball in a shared-fence multi-sport layout.
Multi-Sport Courts
Single slab striped for pickleball, basketball, and tennis overlays. One permit, one fence, three sports. Ideal for mid-size HOA amenity budgets.
View multi-sport options →Shuffleboard Courts
Popular in 55+ Marana communities. Narrow footprint, low maintenance, no fencing required. Often added alongside pickleball courts.
View shuffleboard options →HOA Community Pricing
Multi-court projects share excavation mobilization, fencing perimeter, and lighting infrastructure — the per-court cost drops meaningfully as court count increases.
Single Court
One pickleball, basketball, or multi-sport court. Includes caliche excavation, 4" concrete slab, SportMaster two-coat system, line striping, and chain-link fencing.
Get a QuoteMulti-Court Complex
Two or more courts with shared perimeter fencing, LED pole lighting, windscreens, and optional shade structure footings. Most HOA amenity projects fall in this range.
Request Site AssessmentPricing ranges reflect typical Marana projects. Dense caliche, sloped sites, or lighting requirements affect final cost. All figures provided after site assessment.
Questions HOA Boards Ask
These come up at almost every board presentation. We have answered them here so your committee can prepare before the first meeting.
Do we need a building permit?
Yes. Most Marana sport courts require a Pima County building permit, typically $150–$400. We file the application — you provide the property survey, we handle the rest.
What does the board submittal package include?
Stamped drawings, SportMaster color chips, fence specs, a 10-year maintenance schedule, and warranty documents assigned to the HOA — everything needed for a clean approval vote.
How long does approval typically take?
With a complete package, most Marana HOA boards approve in one to two meeting cycles — roughly 4 to 8 weeks from first submittal.
How does caliche affect cost?
Dense caliche requires pneumatic excavation. We assess depth before finalizing the bid and include a caliche allowance so there are no change-order surprises mid-project.
Can construction happen in summer?
Yes, with adjusted scheduling. Concrete pours happen before 10 AM or after 5 PM in June–September. SportMaster coatings require surface temps below 90°F — we schedule coating days accordingly.
What surface colors will the HOA approve?
Earth tones — sandstone, slate, terracotta — move through Marana HOA reviews fastest. We bring physical color chips to the presentation, not digital swatches.
What is the long-term maintenance cost?
SportMaster surfaces typically need resurfacing every 8–12 years. Annual maintenance is a pressure wash and net/hardware inspection. We document all intervals in the reserve-fund-ready maintenance plan.
Every month without a complete submittal is another board cycle lost.
A site assessment puts stamped drawings and color specs in your board's hands — ready for the next meeting date on the calendar.
Request Your HOA Site Assessment