Case study
Project proof, built into a reusable evidence page.
The value of a multi-sport court is operational density: one surface can carry multiple programmes if the specification and line hierarchy are resolved early.
This case study provides proof for schools and institutions comparing turf, acrylic and hybrid surface options for high-use sport areas.
Challenge
Institutional courts need to support several sports, heavy timetable use and clear markings without confusing play or increasing maintenance burden.
Solution
JL Turf Group installed a shared-use court surface with line marking for netball, basketball and tennis, supported by appropriate base preparation and drainage planning.
Outcome
A flexible institutional court that increases site utility by supporting multiple sports on one durable surface.
Materials / systems
Multi-sport synthetic court surface · Multi-code line marking · Prepared court base · Drainage-aware set-out
Visible proof
Public proof cards for buyer validation.
These facts are intentionally limited to approved marketing evidence: no private budgets, correspondence, client details or unpublished approvals.
Project size
Institutional multi-sport court with netball, basketball and tennis markings
Location
Sydney NSW
Surface system
Commercial synthetic multi-sport turf with shared-use line marking for school and institutional sport.
Base and drainage
The court proof highlights sub-base preparation and drainage construction before synthetic surfacing.
Timeline
Managed as a school/institutional sequence from site assessment through base, drainage, surfacing and line marking.
Constraints
Support multiple sports on one footprint · Maintain line-marking clarity for shared use · Withstand daily institutional traffic
Handover
Public proof imagery and project facts show the finished line-marked surface and facility context.
Maintenance notes
Shared-use courts should be swept, brushed and inspected for drainage, joins and line visibility.
Buyer outcome
A flexible sports asset that gives schools and institutions more use from one dedicated court area.




