Artificial Grass Indianapolis, IN
Just in a couple of hours from Indianapolis, Indiana, the three high schools have joined the trend of replacing their natural playing grass fields with
synthetic grass. Buerk Field, Ron Weigleb Stadium and Gene Sartini Field of
Floyds Knobs now feature the artificial turf surfaces. Synthetic grass field
is bringing joy and relieve to the players and the directors.
The battles of logistical nightmares are finally ending for
athletic directors and maintenance personnel by make a decision to put an artificial
synthetic turf. Every day the schools had to constantly water the grass field,
limit foot traffic on the grass field and keep the grass field alive. "There
was a need that existed because we had so many teams (five, counting the
neighboring junior high) practicing," school's athletic
director reported to the associated press regarding the need of changing their
field to the synthetic grass. "It just kind of grew from a necessity to what we
could do, what could be done other than giving us more practice space." Making the final decision to lay artificial synthetic
turf on the sports playing fields is worth it because the end result will automatically
benefit the school and the environment.
Some of the factors that most high schools in Indianapolis, IN consider to turn towards synthetic turf are space, cost, and maintenance. Space has always been a concern at New
Albany high school, with its land-locked city campus they constantly had to worry
about keeping the grass field in shape for players to successfully practices.
Other factors that went into the decision of artificial grass included cost
savings on maintaining a grass field and safety for athletes. On its two fields,
the Floyd County School Corporation spent $1.3 million, which
was funded by a bond issue from a state. Providence officials did not reveal
the price tag for their new facility; however, at the end the cost was not relevant
to what the faculties of schools thought to be beneficial for their sport
players. According to the staff, "It's a lot safer environment and practice
area for the athletes. Our ability to use the same area over and over is a
plus. I can see more and more teams getting it." Louisville city high school
players' injuries and the environmental impact on the earth made it worth the
price for the final verdict.
The three high schools further analyzed the benefits before making
a final decision to lay the synthetic grass on their filed. Safety is number
one benefit to use the synthetic turf that many consider. According to a
five-year study published in the American Journal of Sports Medicine, high
school athletes on the more yielding artificial turf had 55 percent fewer
neural injuries, 47 percent fewer cranial or cervical injuries and a 45 percent
reduction in long-term injuries. A three-year study among college athletes
recorded 74 percent fewer muscle tears and 42 percent fewer ACL knee injuries. Playability
is another concern that was brought on the table. The director of facilities
for the Louisville city high school said the current grass fields supports only
22 events per year before deteriorating. Games played soon after a heavy rain
would reduce the field to a dirty mess where it would increase the chances of player's
injuries. After the initial installation cost, the three schools saved money on
water, sprinkling system installation and repair, labor costs for maintaining
the grass field and machinery for keeping it in shape.Many other neighborhood high schools in Floyd Nobs, Indianapolis are also making
a decision to switch the grass field to the artificial grass. The move to
artificial turf is not limited to the larger schools. But it is more prevalent
among Class 6-A programs, with 20 of the 32 teams in the highest grading arrangement,
including cities around Louisville, Indiana, now on board.