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CULTURE

Addressing the Noise Problem in America's Fastest-growing Sport

Via CNN

Summary

Pickleball's explosive growth into America's most popular new sport has come with an unexpected consequence: a wave of noise complaints, lawsuits, and community battles over the distinctive sharp pop of the plastic ball striking a hard paddle. The sound registers around 1,200 Hz, a frequency at which human hearing is exceptionally sensitive and that has proven more irritating to neighbors than the lower-pitched sounds of tennis, driving residents in dozens of cities to petition governments, file lawsuits, and block new court construction.

Communities have responded with a patchwork of local ordinances requiring courts to be set back 150 to 500 feet from residences, mandating sound-absorbing barriers, and restricting play to specific hours. The conflict has exposed the tension between pickleball's genuinely inclusive appeal across age groups and the real land-use challenges of rapidly scaling a sport that generates significant noise in dense residential neighborhoods.

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