DTC specializes in residential and commercial tennis, pickleball, basketball and sport courts providing construction, resurfacing and equipment with exceptional quality and service for all types of new and older projects. At Dobbs Tennis, we are proud of our record of on-time and within-budget projects. We service all over Texas, and have offices and service crews in both Dallas and Austin, Texas. DTC is a member of the American Sports Builders Association. Our philosophy is that communication, teamwork, and on-site supervision of projects from beginning to end are the keys to our success and your happiness.
Services
How often should I resurface? That is a question that we get asked all the time. But unlike buying a new vehicle, there are no specific repairs that have to be done at specific intervals or take a chance that your car is ruined. We can tell you what other people and/or organizations do however. For almost all of the tennis events that you see on TV, the courts are resurfaced every year.
Yes, this actually is a color photograph! This court should have been resurfaced many long years ago. Since it wasn't, extra hours were spent scraping the loose areas, and extra surfacing materials were needed just to get an even base surface. This is an asphalt court, with some wide cracks that have been left untreated for a long time.
RiteWay offers a signature court crack repair system that stands in a league of its own. The RiteWay Crack Repair System is a patented system that uses a micro sealant technology to repair existing court cracks. The RiteWay Crack Repair System (U.S. Patent No. 7,597,503) utilizes a micro-technology that allows the existing cracks on your court to move without breaking the membrane of this system.
This tennis court is located in a very high wind area. The windscreen probably should have been installed flush to the top of the fence, allowing the wind someplace to escape. Unfortunately, the high winds basically just blew the fence over, bending all the poles at the bottom. This fence pole has completely rusted through at the bottom, and is actually being supported in the air by the fence fabric.
Reviews (2)
David K.
Nov 17, 2020
Francis L.
Nov 25, 2019