San Francisco Pickleball Organization logo featuring a stylized pickleball court with a net, surrounded by a circular border with text and two pickleball icons.

Building the Future of Pickleball in San Francisco

Pickleball is building community in San Francisco

On any given morning at Moscone, Sutter, Larsen, Presidio Wall, and other spots around the city, you'll find the same scene: neighbors who've never met before — in their 20s, 40s, 70s — laughing through a game, trading paddles, swapping phone numbers. It's the most lively sports participation infrastructure the city has built in a generation.

Placeholder icon representing a group of people

All ages

from kids to retirees

Solid navy blue heart shape

Access to play

open public courts

A line graph with an upward trend, indicating growth or increase.

Fastest-growing

sport in America in the past 5 years

From taped lines to a citywide movement

2018

A handful of courts

About a dozen public spots citywide. Players showed up with chalk, tape, and portable nets to claim the space.

2021

Goldman Tennis Center opens

16 lit tennis courts and 5 multipurpose mini-courts suitable for youth tennis and pickleball.

2022

The boom hits San Francisco

Demand explodes. Volunteers and clubs organize. SF Rec & Park works to create additional options for play.

2026

74 courts, but ⅔ shared with tennis

A 7× expansion in five years. New flagship complexes at Larsen and Crocker Amazon — yet demand still outpaces supply, and players surveyed want lights and hubs of 6+ courts.

Demand has outgrown the city’s current shared spaces

Players are travelling farther and earlier to find open court space. The fix isn't fewer players — it's larger and more convenient dedicated places to play. Our mission is to champion the growth of pickleball in San Francisco, fostering a healthier and more connected city through additional public facilities, inclusive access, and program opportunities for players of all ages and abilities. Currently there are —

16

locations with multiple courts across SF

7

times growth in courts since 2018

2

dedicated hubs of 6+ courts in SF

Where are SF’s outdoor public courts today?

The most popular and frequently used venues have permanent nets dedicated to pickleball-only play. But two-thirds of available courts are still shared with tennis, and players in both sports are unhappy with the arrangement. The trend nationwide has been to move away from dual-lined courts and build pickleball facilities further away from homes.

A table listing various popular playground and sports venues, their number of courts, perimeter nets, and whether they have lights.
Map of Hawaii showing numbered and lettered locations.

The Moscone Park Project

A pickleball hub in the Marina

Satellite view of a neighborhood with a large park containing softball fields, playgrounds, tennis courts, and a golf driving cage, bordered by streets and residential buildings.

Moscone Recreation Center is the right site: room for a dedicated hub, lights already in place, and full support from SF Rec & Park. Private funding is the final piece — and that's exactly what partnership with the San Francisco Pickleball Coalition is built to deliver.

The city is leaning in. Now we need partners who will too.

SF Rec & Park is committed to a long-term partnership with the pickleball community. Public dollars have carried us this far. Private partners will bring us into the future — with the plaza, programming, and citywide momentum that turn a project into a legacy.


Build it right

🟡

Open to all

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Leave a legacy

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Build it right 🟡 Open to all 🟡 Leave a legacy 🟡