logo
indoor padel courts

Oct . 02, 2025 14:30 Back to list

Need a padel court with panoramic glass and quick install?



NO.3 Classic padel black — field notes from the court-building front line

If you’re shopping for a padel court, you’ve probably noticed the market has exploded. To be honest, the signals are clear: clubs want panoramic sightlines, cities want durable infrastructure, and players want speed without glare. I’ve toured factories from Shijiazhuang to Seville; the NO.3 Classic padel black, built in Shijiazhuang, Hebei, China, hits that sweet spot of robust steelwork and clean, modern glass.

Need a padel court with panoramic glass and quick install?

Industry trends I keep hearing about

Municipal sports parks and school campuses are adopting padel courts because the footprint (20×10 m) is compact and programming is easy. Private clubs, meanwhile, ask for silent mesh, anti-corrosion coatings, and TV-friendly “panoramic” ends. Actually, lighting uniformity is the sleeper variable; poor optics ruin play more than people realize.

Product snapshot: NO.3 Classic padel black

Product Advantages: Panoramic Innovation: Our panoramic padel courts redefine the playing experience with clear glass ends and minimal sightline interruptions—great for spectators and livestreams.

Model NO.3 Classic padel black
Origin Shijiazhuang, Hebei, China
Frame Steel S355 structural steel, laser-cut; hot-dip galvanized (ISO 1461), powder coat RAL 9005
Glass 12 mm tempered, EN 12150; polished edges; anti-shatter fragmentation test passed
Mesh Panels 50×50 mm, ≈4 mm wire; noise-damped fixing
Turf Monofilament/fibrillated 12–15 mm with silica infill; UV-stable
Lighting LED 200–500+ lux target (real-world varies), anti-glare optics
Dimensions 20×10 m; side fence 3 m, ends up to 4 m (panoramic)
Service Life ≈10–15 years with routine maintenance; coastal sites may vary
Need a padel court with panoramic glass and quick install?

How it’s built (process flow)

Design and calcs → CNC steel fabrication → Hot-dip galvanizing (ISO 1461) → Powder coating 80–100 μm; adhesion tested to ISO 2409/ASTM D3359 → Glass toughening to EN 12150 with impact/fragmentation checks → Turf cutting, seaming, infill calibration → Photometric aiming of LEDs → Final QA: bolt torque, levelness, ball rebound, and mesh resonance.

Test data we’ve seen on recent builds: salt-spray corrosion resistance 500 h (ASTM B117, indicative), wind resistance design ≈0.6–0.8 kN/m² depending on anchorage, vertical glass deflection well within guideline tolerances. Results vary by site and foundations, of course.

Where it fits

- Community clubs needing a flagship padel court with spectator-friendly ends
- Resorts and rooftops after premium aesthetics
- Schools that want low-maintenance multi-season play

Advantages I’ve noticed in the field

  • Panoramic ends: smoother broadcast angles and coaching visibility.
  • Quiet hardware: fewer “rattles” on fence rebounds, which players actually mention a lot.
  • Coastal-ready coating stack: galvanizing + powder coat is a good belt-and-suspenders approach.

Vendor snapshot (real-world considerations)

Vendor Glass Coating Wind Rating Warranty Lead Time
NO.3 Classic padel black 12 mm EN 12150 HDG + powder (≈80–100 μm) ≈0.6–0.8 kN/m² (site-dependent) Up to 5 yrs (typical) ≈4–8 weeks
EU Premium Brand A 12 mm EN 12150 HDG + powder ≈0.8 kN/m² 5–7 yrs 8–12 weeks
Budget Importer 10–12 mm Paint only ≈0.4–0.5 kN/m² 1–2 yrs 2–6 weeks

Customization

RAL colors, logo prints, lighting levels for recreational vs. broadcast, fence height tweaks, and foundation options for slab or isolated footings. Many customers say the black finish photographs best; I’d agree.

Mini case stories

- Coastal resort install: after 14 months, no blistering; mesh noise measurably lower during windy days (informal decibel checks).
- City club upgrade: replaced aging cage-style padel court with panoramic ends; membership play hours up ≈18% month-on-month, which seems consistent with what managers tell me elsewhere.

Need a padel court with panoramic glass and quick install?

Certifications and standards referenced

Manufacturing typically aligns with ISO 9001 quality systems; toughened glass to EN 12150; galvanizing per ISO 1461; coating adhesion verified via ISO 2409/ASTM D3359; lighting designed against EN 12193 targets; and court layout per International Padel Federation guidelines. Always verify with your local code official.

References:

  1. International Padel Federation (FIP) – Official Court Regulations and Dimensions.
  2. EN 12150 – Thermally Toughened Soda Lime Silicate Safety Glass Standard.
  3. ISO 1461 – Hot Dip Galvanized Coatings; ISO 2409 / ASTM D3359 – Paint Adhesion Tests; EN 12193 – Sports Lighting.
Share

If you are interested in our products, you can choose to leave your information here, and we will be in touch with you shortly.