Daily Camera (Boulder)

Pickleball complex will open 13 new courts

- By John Aguilar jaguilar@denverpost.com

Lucky’s Market hasn’t sold a jar of pickles in Wheat Ridge for more than three years.

But the 35,000-squarefoot space at West 38th Avenue and Wadsworth Boulevard that was home to the Boulder-based natural foods-focused grocery chain that carried Grillo’s pickle chips and Bubbies Kosher dills until 2020 will soon house a different kind of pickle — Colorado’s largest indoor pickleball complex.

Nascent operator 3rd Shot Pickleball plans to lay out 13 courts inside the empty box store, complete with bar and lounge for après-smacking snacking. The company signed a 10-year lease with building owner Quadrant Properties last week and hopes to open for business Oct. 1.

“It’s a beautiful coincidenc­e,” 3rd Shot co-owner Max Ireland said of the juxtaposit­ion of having a decidedly cursed number of courts in a building emblazoned with the word Lucky’s. “Thirteen fit in there really nicely.”

Ireland, who has worked in hospitalit­y and restaurant management, is teaming up with Adam Kahn, long-time owner of the Meadow Creek Tennis & Fitness Club in Lakewood, to launch 3rd Shot Pickleball. The name, Kahn said, comes from the importance of the third hit of a point — that’s when a player doesn’t need to let the ball bounce and can forge an attack on the opponent.

“The effectiven­ess of the third shot determines the effectiven­ess of the point 80% of the time,” he said.

The Lucky’s building turned out to have the perfect dimensions for a pickleball complex, with 25-foot-high ceilings and enough space around support columns for courts. Kahn and Ireland looked at a dozen sites before settling on the shuttered grocer a few months ago.

They are putting nearly a million dollars into the project.

“It’s much harder to find a space for pickleball than you might think,” Kahn said of the sport that has taken the nation by storm in recent years.

But pickleball’s rising popularity has prompted numerous complaints about the noise the hard paddles and plastic balls make when they come together.

In March, Centennial temporaril­y banned the constructi­on of new outdoor pickleball courts near homes in the city so it could study the noise issue.

A few days later, Denver shut down its pickleball courts at Congress Park due to noise complaints. That won’t be an issue for neighbors living near the Lucky’s building, said Steve Art, Wheat Ridge’s economic developmen­t manager.

“Having it as an indoor facility will certainly be good for people bothered by pickleball noise,” he said.

The lease on the Lucky’s building, which closed shop in January 2020 after having opened to much fanfare just 18 months earlier, means the end of the three-year mystery about what will occupy a prominent space at one of Wheat Ridge’s main retail centers, The Corners.

“The building has sat empty for several years, so it’s nice to see it get another use,” Art said.

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