HOA Sport Court Installation in Sahuarita
Multi-court installations built for board approval — from initial site assessment through Pima County permits, SportMaster surfacing, and final close-out documentation. We've worked inside Sahuarita's HOA process long enough to know what boards need before they ask.
How We Work Through the HOA Process
Sahuarita's HOA communities each have their own submittal requirements. This is the sequence we follow on every community project.
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1
Site Assessment
We walk the proposed court area, check grade, identify caliche depth, and confirm utility setbacks. This visit produces the measurements your HOA site plan will be built from.
1–2 days after contact -
2
Spec Package Preparation
We produce a dimensioned site plan, SportMaster color samples, fencing and windscreen specs, and a draft maintenance outline — everything Sahuarita boards typically request in one document set.
5–7 business days -
3
Board Presentation Support
We attend board meetings on request, answer technical questions directly, and revise spec materials if the board requires changes before voting.
Per your board's meeting schedule -
4
Pima County Permit Application
Once HOA approval is in hand, we submit the building permit application to Pima County. Homeowners or the HOA provide the property survey; we handle the rest. Permit fees run $150–$400.
2–4 weeks county review -
5
Construction & Close-Out
Caliche excavation, subgrade prep, concrete pour (scheduled around heat and monsoon windows), SportMaster surfacing, line striping, net posts, and fencing — followed by warranty and maintenance documentation for board records.
3–6 weeks depending on court count
What Boards Receive at Close-Out
Documentation that holds up in board records and protects the community's investment long-term.
Stamped Site Plan
A dimensioned as-built drawing showing court locations, setbacks, and drainage — formatted for HOA records and any future permit reference.
SportMaster Material Specs
Full product data sheets for every coating layer applied, including color codes, slip-resistance ratings, and UV stability data.
Maintenance Schedule
A written annual maintenance outline covering pressure washing frequency, crack monitoring, and recommended recoat intervals for Sahuarita's heat and UV exposure.
Warranty Documentation
SportMaster manufacturer warranty plus a written workmanship warranty, both formatted for easy filing and clear on what each covers.
Court Types for Community Installations
Most Sahuarita HOA amenity areas benefit from multi-court layouts that serve multiple resident groups without duplicating infrastructure.
HOA Pickleball Courts
Two or four courts per pod. Quiet surface options available for residential adjacency. Standard 20×44 ft per court.
HOA Basketball Courts
Full and half-court configurations. Adjustable-height post systems for youth and adult play. SportMaster cushioned surface available.
HOA Tennis Courts
USTA-dimension courts with windscreen fencing. Dual-surface color zoning allows pickleball overlay on the same slab.
HOA Multi-Sport Courts
One slab, multiple sports. Basketball, pickleball, and shuffleboard lines in contrasting SportMaster color zones — maximizes amenity value per square foot.
View multi-sport options →HOA Shuffleboard Courts
Standard 52×10 ft outdoor courts with textured SportMaster finish optimized for disc speed in low-humidity desert conditions.
View shuffleboard options →Community Court Pricing
Pricing scales with court count, surface type, fencing, and lighting. These ranges reflect completed Sahuarita-area projects.
Single Court
One pickleball, basketball, or tennis court. Includes subgrade prep, caliche excavation, concrete, SportMaster two-coat system, and line striping. Fencing quoted separately.
See all Sahuarita court optionsMulti-Court Community Complex
Two or more courts on a shared or adjacent slab. Includes shared fencing, windscreens, net post systems, and lighting rough-in. HOA spec package and permit management included.
Get a Project EstimateAll estimates are project-specific. Caliche depth, site access, and HOA fencing requirements affect final cost. We provide written line-item bids before any work begins.
Questions HOA Boards Ask
Does the HOA board need to approve before permits are pulled?
Yes. Pima County permits are separate from HOA approval. We sequence the process so board approval comes first — the permit application follows once the submittal is accepted.
What documents do boards typically require?
Most Sahuarita HOAs request a dimensioned site plan, SportMaster color samples, fencing specifications, and a maintenance outline. We prepare all of these as part of our standard spec package.
How does caliche soil affect the project?
Caliche requires mechanical excavation 6–8 inches deeper than standard subgrades. We account for this in every bid — no change orders for caliche discovery mid-project.
Can one slab support multiple court types?
Yes. A properly designed multi-sport slab carries pickleball, basketball, and shuffleboard lines simultaneously using contrasting SportMaster color zones. See our HOA multi-sport page for layout examples.
How do you schedule pours around Sahuarita summers?
Concrete pours are scheduled before 7 a.m. June through September, with curing blankets used when ambient temps exceed 90°F. SportMaster coatings are applied only when slab surface temp is below 120°F.
What warranty documentation goes to the board?
Every project closes with a SportMaster manufacturer warranty, a written workmanship warranty, an annual maintenance schedule, and a recommended recoat timeline — all formatted for board records.
Ready to bring a court proposal to your board?
We'll prepare the full spec package — site plan, color samples, fencing specs, and maintenance outline — so your board has everything it needs to vote with confidence.
Request Your HOA Spec Package