WB Rubber installs agility and sled-track turf for CrossFit boxes, commercial gyms, sports performance centers, and home gym sled areas across Texas. Our SportTurf ships in 15-foot-wide rolls, which is the exact width most sled tracks need, so a 10 to 15 foot wide track goes down as a single seamless piece. We install the turf and the adjoining rubber flooring in one visit.
SportTurf rolls are 15 feet wide, which matches the typical sled track width most boxes and performance gyms install. The track goes down as one continuous piece with no center seam to catch a sled or open up under heavy drag loads.
We already install Reaction Series and Stamina Series rubber flooring for CrossFit boxes and commercial gyms. Running the turf strip during the same install eliminates the coordination gap between two contractors and keeps the transition between surfaces flush and tight.
Sled push and pull performance depends on consistent pile density and the right infill. We spec shorter, denser pile with anti-static silica sand or cooling infill so drag resistance stays even across the full track length.
Full layouts for CrossFit boxes, functional training facilities, and sports performance centers. Turf lane for sled work, rubber for lifting platforms and rig zones, and cleanly terminated transitions between the two surfaces.
Residential garage and basement gyms with a 10 to 20 foot sled lane get the same turf spec as commercial installs, cut to your exact footprint. Integrates with your existing rubber floor or installed together as one project.
Based in Montgomery, TX and installing across Houston, Katy, The Woodlands, Conroe, College Station, and Sugar Land. All of Texas is within the service area for commercial and residential gym turf projects.
Agility turf inside a gym gets hit with a narrow, repetitive set of loads: sled pushes, sled pulls, prowler drags, sprint starts, and heavy walks. Those loads punish a turf system in ways that a landscape or sports-field install never sees. The pile gets compressed on the same lines every session, infill migrates toward the end of the track, and any seam that runs down the middle of a sled lane will eventually pop. The product choice and the install method have to match that reality from day one.
The most useful technical fact for a gym turf project is that our SportTurf ships in 15-foot-wide rolls. Most sled tracks in CrossFit boxes and commercial functional training gyms are 10 to 15 feet wide, and the serious home gym tracks sit in the same range. That means the entire track can go down as a single piece with zero seam in the high-wear center of the lane. A single-piece lane is not a nice-to-have detail, it is the difference between a track that holds up for ten-plus years of daily sled work and one that starts separating at year three.
WB Rubber installs agility turf for CrossFit boxes, commercial gyms, sports performance centers, and private training facilities across Texas. We serve Houston, Katy, The Woodlands, Conroe, College Station, Sugar Land, and the rest of our Texas service area, including facilities in Harris County and the surrounding counties. Home gym builds with a dedicated sled lane fall under the same service, cut to the specific dimensions of your garage, basement, or outbuilding.
For the larger context on commercial turf applications we handle, see the commercial turf hub. For the rubber side of a typical gym build, see our CrossFit box flooring, commercial gym flooring, and home gym flooring pages.
Gym turf is a different spec sheet from landscape turf. For sled push and sled pull consistency, the pile needs to be shorter and denser than a backyard product. A tall, sparse pile flattens unevenly under sled pressure, which means the athlete feels different resistance at the start of the track than at the end. A shorter, higher-face-weight construction gives you repeatable drag numbers across the full length, which is what coaches and athletes care about. We spec the pile height and face weight based on the primary use: sled and prowler work, sprint starts, or general agility.
Infill choice is the second technical decision. Standard silica sand works for most commercial sled tracks because it sits stable under drag and does not migrate the way crumb rubber can under concentrated sled loads. Anti-static silica sand is the default in air-conditioned indoor facilities where static buildup becomes noticeable. For gyms with barefoot training zones or for residential installs where the track sees barefoot use, cooling infill options reduce surface temperature and keep the turf usable in Texas heat. Crumb rubber has a place in mixed-use lanes that see some plyometric work, but it is not our first pick for a dedicated sled track.
The other thing that separates a gym turf install from a landscape install is the integration with adjacent rubber flooring. Almost every agility turf project we do sits next to either Reaction Series rolled rubber or Stamina Series tiles. The transition between the two surfaces has to be flush, tight, and durable enough to survive athletes running across it at full speed. We handle both materials in the same visit, which means we can dial the turf edge and the rubber edge to each other on site instead of hoping two separate contractors leave behind compatible terminations.
A typical commercial layout puts the turf strip along one long wall for sled work and sprints, with rubber covering the rest of the floor for lifting, rigs, and conditioning stations. A home gym layout might be a 12-by-40 turf lane along the back of the garage with rubber under the rack and platform. Both are standard projects for us. We quote the rubber and turf together, deliver together, and install together, which is the efficient way to build a functional training floor in Texas.
Common questions about gym & agility turf from WB Rubber customers.