News

Get Air Medford Opens With Slamball, Foam Pits and Family Programming

Get Air Medford opened to the public with Slamball, foam pits and family programming, bringing trampoline-powered action and new recreational options to southern Oregon.

David Kumar2 min read
Published
Listen to this article0:00 min
Share this article:
Get Air Medford Opens With Slamball, Foam Pits and Family Programming
AI-generated illustration

Get Air Trampoline Park in Medford opened its doors to the public on January 25, 2026, introducing a high-energy mix of attractions that range from wall-to-wall trampolines and foam pits to dodgeball courts, ninja obstacles and Slamball, the trampoline-powered contact sport. The facility pairs drop-in action with structured family programming - Toddler Time, Club Air and Sensory Hours - positioning the site as both an athlete playground and a community hub.

At the core of the opening is Slamball, which uses trampolines to amplify vertical play and contact. While no competitive Slamball fixtures were staged for the launch, the inclusion of Slamball on the site’s roster signals a deliberate push to broaden alternative-sports participation in the region. Slamball’s demand for aerial skill, timing and physicality could create a local pipeline for athletes who migrate from basketball, parkour or gymnastics, and the Medford location gives those athletes a dedicated venue to rehearse flight mechanics and contact drills that a traditional court cannot replicate.

Player development and programming will determine whether Get Air Medford becomes a regional Slamball center. The park’s layout - foam pits for safe landings, wall-to-wall trampolines for continuous motion and dodgeball courts for competitive small-sided play - supports progressive training models. Coaches and organizers can stage controlled scrimmages and clinics that emphasize takeoff angles, rebound control and aerial positioning. From a business standpoint, the facility taps into a growing experiential-recreation market where activity providers monetize time-based sessions, parties and targeted hours for distinct demographics.

Family programming at Get Air aims to broaden the customer base beyond weekend thrill-seekers. Toddler Time removes competitive pressure and introduces motor skill development for young children. Club Air provides a youth-focused social outlet during off-peak hours, and Sensory Hours create an accessible window for neurodiverse guests by reducing noise and crowding. Those programs add predictable, bookable inventory that supports weekdays and morning traffic, which benefits revenue stability and workforce scheduling.

Culturally, the Medford opening reflects how action sports are folding into everyday recreation rather than remaining fringe spectacles. Slamball’s presence alongside family offerings underscores a hybrid model: extreme sport as both spectator spectacle and participatory fitness. For local athletes, trainers and organizers, Get Air Medford lowers the barrier to experiment with Slamball-specific drills and to seed community leagues or pickup circuits.

What comes next is adoption: whether local players show up to test verticality, whether schools and youth programs incorporate trampoline-based training, and whether organizers can translate casual sessions into regular competitive fixtures. For readers, the opening represents a new arena for athletic play and social programming - a place to learn aerial skills, host events and watch Slamball move from novelty toward organized local sport.

Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?

Submit a Tip

Never miss a story.
Get Slamball updates weekly.

The top stories delivered to your inbox.

Free forever · Unsubscribe anytime

Discussion

More Slamball News