Harbor Pickleball opens seven indoor courts in Commack industrial space
Harbor Pickleball turned a Commack industrial building into seven climate-controlled courts, adding cameras, lessons and event rentals to Long Island’s indoor play map.

Harbor Pickleball turned a 20,000-square-foot industrial property in Commack into one of Long Island’s newest indoor pickleball addresses, giving the region seven climate-controlled courts at 5 Brayton Court. The club opened inside Blumenfeld Development Group’s building with the kind of setup players notice immediately: Pro-Cushion surfaces meant to lessen joint impact, professional-grade regulation spacing, premium lighting and courtside cameras that let members review and save game footage.
That camera system gives the club an edge beyond casual open play. It adds a training layer for players who want to break down points after a session, while the seven-court footprint gives Harbor enough room to spread out skill-based play, lessons and clinics without making the place feel like a cramped drop-in gym. For a destination-minded crowd, that matters. A venue that can support private or corporate rentals has a much better shot at drawing weekend groups, work outings and repeat bookings than a single-purpose court warehouse.
Harbor’s business model is built to keep people on site longer. Memberships start at $9 a month with no contract, and the club also offers punch passes, court rentals, open play organized by skill level, private lessons, clinics and corporate or private event rentals. The venue has also paired with Pino’s of Dix Hills and Huntington-based Six Harbors Brewing Company to support a self-pour beer-and-wine wall and grab-and-go food options, a combination that pushes it closer to a social club than a simple court rental business.

The building’s former life as a gymnastics facility fits the broader adaptive-reuse pattern now showing up across pickleball development, where empty industrial or athletic spaces are being reworked for a sport that needs ceiling height, square footage and reliable indoor play. In Commack, that conversion has produced a practical new stop for Long Island players who want court time through heat, rain or off-hours when outdoor parks are packed. Seven indoor courts do not just fill a building, they give the region another real place to organize the day around pickleball.
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