Primary School netball courts
What separates a school facility from an actual sports club is maintenance consistency, equipment standards, and what happens when something breaks. Primary school netball courts get heavy use during term time but sit idle during holidays—a pattern that creates different wear pressures than regular club play. Someone choosing a primary school facility needs to understand court surface condition, whether lines are properly marked and visible, and whether there's reliable access during the times they actually want to play. Good court maintenance means resanding or resurfacing on schedule, not waiting until the surface deteriorates to the point where it's genuinely unsafe. It means goal posts that are firmly anchored, nets without holes, and a playing surface that plays consistently across all areas—not worn thin in high-traffic zones and springy at the edges. For netball particularly, court preparation matters: proper base layer, correct slope for drainage, and surface friction that suits competitive play. The difference between a court that's merely available and one that's genuinely fit for purpose shows in how it handles a full season of regular use.