Sport Court Resurfacing & Painting in Seattle, WA If your tennis, pickleball, or basketball court in Seattle is showing wear, fading, or cracking, professional sport court resurfacing can restore safety, performance, and appearance without full reconstruction. At 1-800-STRIPER of Bellevue, we specialize in sport court resurfacing (including acrylic surfacing systems), painting, crack repair, and line … Read more
Bellevue
Crack Sealing vs Sealcoating: What’s the Difference (and Which One Your Asphalt Actually Needs) Property owners hear “crack sealing” and “sealcoating” used in the same sentence all the time, so it’s easy to assume they’re interchangeable. They’re not. They solve different problems, and using the wrong one (or doing them in the wrong order) is … Read more
Sport Court Resurfacing & Painting in Madison Park, Seattle Madison Park is one of Seattle’s most well-kept residential neighborhoods, with private driveways, backyard courts, and shared HOA amenities that need to look good and perform well. At 1-800-STRIPER of Bellevue, we provide sport court resurfacing (including acrylic surfacing systems), painting, crack repair, and line striping … Read more
Acrylic Paint for Tennis Courts: What It Is, Why It’s Used, and When to Recoat If you’ve been researching acrylic paint for tennis courts, you’re probably trying to answer a few practical questions: What type of paint is actually used on courts, how long does it last, and is this something you can DIY, or … Read more
Sport Court Resurfacing & Painting in Magnolia, Seattle Magnolia is one of Seattle’s most residential, low-traffic neighborhoods — bigger lots, quieter streets, and homeowners who care about doing things right the first time. If you’ve got an existing asphalt or concrete court that’s faded, slick, cracked, or just outdated, we help bring it back with … Read more
Can You Play Pickleball on a Tennis Court? Yes, you can play pickleball on a tennis court, and it’s extremely common. Across the U.S., tennis courts are frequently shared or temporarily converted to accommodate pickleball players, especially in parks, schools, and private facilities. However, how well it works depends on court layout, line markings, and … Read more
Pickleball Court vs Tennis Court: Size, Layout, and Conversion Explained As pickleball continues to grow in popularity, many property owners, HOAs, schools, and municipalities ask the same question: What’s the difference between a pickleball court and a tennis court? More specifically: How big is a pickleball court compared to a tennis court? How many pickleball … Read more
If you’re planning to build, resurface, stripe, or maintain a tennis court, one of the first questions that comes up is simple but important: How many square feet is a tennis court? The answer depends on whether you’re measuring just the playing area or the full court footprint, including safety runoffs. Below is a clear … Read more
If you just need the quick answer: a regulation pickleball net is 36 inches high at the sidelines and 34 inches high at the center. Below is a simple, practical explanation of what that means, how to measure it, and why it matters for real-world courts. Regulation Pickleball Net Height Sidelines (each end/post side): 36 … Read more
OMWBE / MBE-Certified Sport Court Contractor in Washington Athletic and recreation courts often show up late in project schedules — and when they do, general contractors need a subcontractor who can execute cleanly, meet participation goals, and avoid rework. 1-800-STRIPER of Bellevue is an OMWBE-certified contractor in Washington State providing sport court striping and painting … Read more