EHP Resort & Marina puts tennis courts at center of summer reopening
EHP’s summer reset puts tennis and pickleball beside Reggae Sundays, marina dining and a nine-acre waterfront backdrop on Three Mile Harbor.

EHP Resort & Marina reopened for the 2026 summer season with its tennis and pickleball courts pulled into the center of the experience, not treated like a side amenity. Set on nine waterfront acres overlooking Three Mile Harbor, the East Hampton property is leaning hard into the idea of a resort day built around court time, pool time, bikes, dining and the marina.
That matters because the resort’s own amenity pitch is broad: a pool, tennis and pickleball courts, a fitness center, Bluejay electric bikes, the Great Lawn and a tree-lined courtyard all sit inside the same package. The property describes itself as a “full day destination,” and that is the right read for players deciding where summer court time fits into a longer East Hampton outing. At EHP, tennis is part of a larger rhythm that can move from the baseline to the bar to the dock without leaving the property.

The seasonal calendar backs that up. Sí Sí opened on May 21, The Boat House opened on May 23, and Wayan & Ma•dé returned on May 21. Si Sí’s weekly lineup includes Jazz Thursdays, Friday and Saturday Sunset Sessions, and the return of Reggae Sundays. That is the clearest sign of what EHP is selling this summer: hit on court, then stay for music, dinner and the waterfront scene. The resort also layers in a 40-foot Van Dutch boat cruise, a resort shop and a dockside sunset deck, which pushes the whole operation further toward an all-in one summer hangout than a simple overnight stay.
EHP’s current setup also builds on the property’s 2021 relaunch, when the former East Hampton Point was refurbished in a multimillion-dollar renovation that earlier coverage pegged at $5 million. The marina remains a major part of the identity, with 58 boat slips, and the tennis courts sit inside that broader waterfront rebranding rather than apart from it.
For Hamptons players weighing options, EHP is not trying to outmuscle the biggest dedicated racquet clubs. East Hampton Indoor Tennis, operating since 1995, lists 6 indoor courts, 18 outdoor courts, 2 platform and pickleball courts, and 3 padel courts. SPORTIME Amagansett says its East Hampton club is the largest outdoor tennis facility in the Hamptons, with 33 Har-Tru courts, four pickleball courts and 500 to 1,000 players and campers a day in summer. EHP is playing a different game: fewer courts, more resort, and a stronger pitch for anyone who wants tennis folded into dining, music and water views.
That is what stands out in the reopening. EHP is not selling tennis as an isolated amenity. It is making the courts part of the reason to stay, linger and come back once the sun drops over Three Mile Harbor.
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