Berkeley

Pickleball Playing Leads to Noise Complaints in Berkeley

NBC Universal, Inc.

A fast-growing sport is causing some consternation in an East Bay city.

Pickleball, a mashup of regular tennis and table tennis, is popular among cooped-up seniors and millennials, but a lot of fed up neighbors in Berkeley say itโ€™s just too noisy.

During play, a whacking sound is created when a player uses a paddle to hit a plastic ball with holes.

"I understand. It's noisy," Michael Aviles of Oakland said.

Pickleball is what keeps the 67-year-old Aviles active, even after two hip replacements.

But itโ€™s where the pickleball courts in Berkeley are located โ€” sandwiched between two apartment complexes along Hopkins Street โ€” thatโ€™s causing frustration for residents like Ingrid Crickmore.

"It's just very wearing on your ears," she said. "It's just bang, bang."

DeAnn Horn is also among those frustrated.

"It's seven days a week, 12 hours a day," she said.

Horn said weekends are the worst. She shared some photos showing people lining up to wait for their turn.

The noise motivated neighbors to organize. A total of 86 people, who live on both sides of the courts, signed a petition, urging the city to transform the courts back into one tennis court.

The City of Berkeley, the cityโ€™s parks department and the councilmember for the district did not immediately respond to NBC Bay Area's request for comment.

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