Beacon BallieldDimensionsGuide-2024-WEB - Flipbook - Page 4
BALLFIELD LAYOUT
Managing Your Project |
THE 10 KEYS TO SUCCESS
To ensure that you are spending your money wisely,
consider these ten tips from the professionals at
Beacon Athletics, DuraEdge and 4Most Sport Group.
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Get feedback. Ask facility and field maintenance personnel,
schedulers — even fans — to provide suggestions in the design stage.
Assess “wants” vs “needs.” There are many things you want to have,
but there are critical things you need to function successfully.
Find a great knowledge source. Investing in a consultant’s design
experience will save you money by the end of the project.
Get the infrastructure and structures right. They must be able to
support future improvements or expansion to the facility.
Hire only highly qualified, experienced sports field builders.
Delivering a safe, playable and properly functioning sports field is the
most important priority.
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Be realistic when considering everything your fields will be
used for. Besides regular season games, remember that practices,
scrimmages, clinics, different seasons and age groups will all need your
playing surface to perform well. Knowing this will help guide you in the
right choice for products that can stand the test of time and traffic.
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Perform your due diligence as the project advances.
A consultant or project manager's advice at key milestones of your
project will confirm accuracy and compliance with specs. This is especially
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Prioritize quality and performance. Selections made based only
on price will result in under performing products. Cheap and good are not
important if the next phase involves burying or concealing parts of
what has already been built.
synonymous terms.
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Budget wisely. When considering cost, the horizontals inside the
fence — field grade, irrigation & drainage, turf, infield soils, etc. — are far
more important than the verticals outside the fence — scoreboards, foul poles,
bleachers, dugouts, press box, etc. Verticals can always be phased in later.
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Get it right the first time. Poor design choice or bad
workmanship will result in years of frustration. Securing additional
funding to fix your field will be difficult.