The Brook, a planned 79,000-square-foot indoor racquet sports complex, is scheduled to open in Boynton Beach in September 2026. The facility will house both pickleball and tennis courts under a single climate-controlled roof — a combination the operator's Instagram describes as the only one of its kind in the United States, a claim that has not been independently confirmed.
At nearly 80,000 square feet, the project represents a significant commitment to purpose-built racquet infrastructure. The program extends beyond open play: the operator has outlined leagues, tournaments, and structured training programs designed to attract competitive players alongside recreational ones. Climate control is the functional differentiator in this market — South Florida's summer heat and hurricane-season disruptions have historically limited outdoor racquet programs to roughly six months of peak usability, a ceiling that an indoor facility of this scale would effectively eliminate.
The footprint places The Brook in a distinct category from the tennis-club conversions and pickleball pop-ups that have proliferated across South Florida since 2022. Dedicated indoor complexes at this square footage typically support a full-time coaching staff, sanctioned tournament hosting, and the membership infrastructure that drives year-round revenue independent of seasonal traffic patterns.
Boynton Beach sits between two established racquet-sports corridors: Boca Raton, which supports a dense concentration of country-club and private-club tennis programs, and West Palm Beach, where pickleball has grown rapidly at both municipal and private facilities. A 79,000-square-foot indoor anchor in Boynton could draw from both markets, particularly given the absence of comparable purpose-built indoor facilities in the immediate area.
The pickleball component carries particular weight. The sport's competitive circuit has increasingly favored indoor venues for sanctioned play, and operators who can host sanctioned events carry a meaningful advantage in attracting the traveling tournament market. Whether The Brook is pursuing that calendar has not been announced.
The operator has not publicly disclosed a street address, development team, or equity structure for the project. If the September 2026 timeline holds, The Brook would open ahead of the winter season — historically the most competitive window for sports and fitness launches in Palm Beach County. Court counts, membership structure, and programming specifics are expected as the buildout progresses.



