In Handa City, Aichi Prefecture, the prefecture's first-ever pickleball-dedicated outdoor court has been born. The operator is MARINE Inc., and the facility name is "Marine Pickleball Club." In June 2026, it opened with one outdoor mat court, and in July an addition of 1.5 indoor courts is also planned. The location is Mizuho-cho, Handa City. The point that a base flying the flag of "dedicated" from the outset was set up in a regional city within driving distance from Nagoya makes this news more than a mere opening announcement. For enthusiasts in the Tokai area looking for a playing environment, it's a story that doesn't end with just one more choice.
What is Marine Pickleball Club
Marine Pickleball Club launched with a stance of providing a full set—centered on court rental—of lessons, equipment sales, trial sessions, open play, exchange events, and even tournaments. In other words, rather than a place that "only rents courts," it's trying to complete, in one place, everything up to the point where a first-timer borrows tools and gives it a try, and if it suits them, can keep coming with friends. Representative Masashi Watanabe says he encountered pickleball about two years ago when visiting his older sister in America. Seeing firsthand the scene of people connecting regardless of age, gender, or experience, and feeling that dedicated facilities are still lacking in Japan, became the motivation for opening it.
Watanabe describes pickleball as "a sport with the power to connect people across nationality, generation, and background, one that even beginners and those bad at exercise can enjoy right away." These words appear directly in how the facility is built too. Rather than enclosing only competition-minded players, how to get the tier that had drifted away from exercise to stand at the entrance. From the point that it's recruiting coaches to handle once-a-week, 55-minute lessons, you can tell that it built in a teaching function from the start.
Why a "regional dedicated court" now?
The meaning of this opening becomes visible when overlaid with what stage Japan's pickleball environment is now at. Market surveys say the domestic competitive population grew greatly in the past year, and including the latent tier, there's demand on the scale of 10 million people (per Pickleball One's research). On the other hand, nearly half of players use public gymnasiums, and those able to play on dedicated courts stop at around 30%. Even though those who want to play are increasing, dedicated places haven't caught up. The gap between demand and supply is the current reality of Japanese pickleball.
The move to fill that gap has until now been concentrated in Tokyo. In the metropolis, Sansan is advancing a plan to open a large dedicated facility in Ikebukuro, and the U.S.-born brand Picklr is setting up world-standard indoor courts in Toyosu. In a picture where capital and buzz are drawn to the greater Tokyo area, what makes the Handa case distinctive is the point that a single business in a regional city flew the flag of "dedicated." Rather than making do with hourly rentals of a gymnasium, it creates a local place where you can play whenever you go. This decision becomes a concrete example showing that dedicated facilities can hold up outside Tokyo too.
The staged way of building—starting with an outdoor mat court and adding indoor the following month—is also rational. With only outdoor, subject to weather, utilization is hard to read, but adding indoor lets you keep running on rainy days and in summer and winter. The approach of starting small and expanding while gauging the response is a realistic choice for launching a dedicated facility, with its heavy initial investment, in the regions.
Scale and specs
Organizing what's published at present, it's as follows. Figures that couldn't be confirmed, such as fees and court area, are not included here.
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Facility Name | Marine Pickleball Club |
| Operator | MARINE Inc. (representative: Masashi Watanabe) |
| Location | 2-4-28 Mizuho-cho, Handa City, Aichi Prefecture |
| Open | June 2026 |
| Courts (current) | 1 outdoor mat court |
| Planned addition | 1.5 indoor courts (July 2026) |
| Main services | Court rental / lessons / equipment sales / trial sessions / open play / exchange events / tournaments |
The scale itself doesn't reach that of large facilities, but considering how few outdoor courts able to call themselves "dedicated" there were in the Tokai area, even one court is not small in meaning. The combination of an outdoor mat court plus 1.5 indoor courts is a size sense sufficient for running local circle activities and small-group lessons.
Reactions and expectations
For Aichi players, what will first be welcomed is the single point of "dedicated." Until now, in the Tokai area, the main choices were outdoor courts repurposed from tennis hard courts, courts inside commercial facilities, and hourly rentals of gymnasiums. For a tier that has carried inconveniences—not being able to get a reservation when they want to play, the net height and floor feel differing by venue—the value of a place where you can play in the same environment whenever you go is large.
Expectations from the beginner tier can also be read. Because lessons, trial sessions, and equipment sales are all in place, even people without their own tools can try empty-handed. The facility's functions directly boost pickleball's wide gateway—that you can enjoy it right away even if you're bad at exercise. Furthermore, the move to recruit coaches creates a new way of getting involved in the region. With a place for the teaching side, not just the playing side, a cycle that roots the sport locally starts turning.
Implications for Japanese players
So how should you use this facility? A regional dedicated facility differs in how to make use of it from an urban large court.
First, there's value in using it, matter-of-factly, as an entrance. A single outdoor court suits the stage of first trying it out and inviting friends. Unlike large facilities, it's less likely to become a scramble for reservations, and it's easy to find open time. If you try it and feel you want to continue, you can move to the indoor courts opening in July. Even in periods when outdoor is hard to use due to rain, extreme heat, or winter cold, adding indoor lets you make it a year-round habit. A regional dedicated facility can support both "starting" and "continuing" in one place.
Second is the viewpoint of nurturing it as a regional core. In the regions, the base number of players isn't as large as in urban areas. That's exactly why, if people gather at a base like this, it becomes the center of the community itself. Show up at open play and exchange events, improve through lessons, and eventually turn to helping with coaching or operations. There's room, at a regional small-scale facility, to not end as a user who only plays but to turn to the side that nurtures the place. The Handa case also becomes a model of what scale you can start from, for people thinking they want a dedicated court in their own hometown.
Third is adding it, on the premise of travel, to your "list of places you can play." For enthusiasts in the Tokai area, the idea of combining a court in Nagoya City with Handa and using them differently by that day's reservation status and weather becomes realistic. Every time one more dedicated facility is added, this network of choices reliably thickens.
Ripple Effects on the Industry
What the Handa opening shows is a flow in which the wave of dedicated facilities has begun to leave Tokyo and spread to the regions. Until now, the moves of large capital have been skewed to the greater Tokyo area, but once it's understood that regional businesses can make "dedicated" hold up, people making similar decisions will emerge in various places. As the move to supply court flooring domestically emerges, the behind-the-scenes industry that supports facilities is also coming together, and the barrier to launching in the regions is gradually lowering.
Another ripple effect is that those carrying the sport's spread become diverse. Regional-born models, such as Sakaimachi in Ibaraki welcoming a pro player into a regional-revitalization corps, have already begun to move. If a mechanism like Handa's—recruiting coaches locally and developing teaching people within the region—spreads to various places, the growth of the competitive population will stop relying on Tokyo's numbers alone. The regional rollout of dedicated facilities holds the divide over whether Japanese pickleball ends as a passing boom or becomes a habit rooted in the land.
Practical information
- Facility name:Marine Pickleball Club (operator: MARINE Inc.)
- Location:2-4-28 Mizuho-cho, Handa City, Aichi Prefecture
- Courts:1 outdoor mat court (1.5 indoor courts planned to be added in July 2026)
- Uses:Court rental, lessons, trial sessions, open play, equipment sales, exchange events, tournaments
- How to start:You can take part from a trial session or lesson even without tools. It's most reliable to check the latest reservation methods and fees in the operator's official information.
Summary
The opening of Marine Pickleball Club, though modest in number of courts, has meaning in the very fact that a dedicated court is set up in a regional city. In Japan's current situation where demand leads and the dedicated environment hasn't caught up, it's a step showing that dedicated facilities can hold up outside Tokyo too. The staged build of starting outdoor and adding indoor, and the design equipped with a teaching function from the start, are instructive for people who will seek a base in their hometown going forward or who want to advance the sport's spread in their region. Enthusiasts in the Tokai area should first visit once and try adding it to the map of their own "places to play."
FAQ
Where is Marine Pickleball Club?
It's at 2-4-28 Mizuho-cho, Handa City, Aichi Prefecture. The operator is MARINE Inc., and it opened in June 2026.
How many courts are there?
At opening, it's one outdoor mat court. A plan to add 1.5 indoor courts in July 2026 has been announced.
Can beginners use it too?
Yes, they can. Because lessons, trial sessions, and equipment sales are all in place, it's designed to be easy to join even without your own tools. Check the latest reservation methods and fees in the operator's official information.
Recommended Reading
- US Chain Picklr Lands in Japan, Starting in Makuhari with a 7-Court Facility in Toyosu This Fall
- "PICKLEBALL ONE GINZA SHIMBASHI," Tokyo's first urban-type indoor facility, in Shimbashi
- Sakai Town in Ibaraki Makes Pro Players Cooperation Corps Members -- A New Model for Regional Spread
Sources:
