About the Eagle Lake corridor
The Eagle Lake corridor sits along Maple Grove’s southeastern edge, wrapped around Eagle Lake itself and anchored by Eagle Lake Regional Park on the north shoreline. The corridor runs roughly along 93rd Avenue North, with residential streets feeding off both the park access roads and the golf-course frontage to the south. ZIP 55369 covers the full corridor.
Housing here is a mix of golf-course-adjacent custom homes — built mostly through the 1990s and 2000s along the Eagle Lake Youth Golf Course frontage — and family subdivisions from the 2000s and 2010s further north and east. Lot sizes vary: golf-course-facing lots tend toward larger envelopes with mature landscaping, while the subdivision sections off 93rd Avenue run closer to standard suburban dimensions. Average affluence skews mid-to-upper, and the established sport-court industry presence in this corridor (a small cluster of court-trade operators have shops along 93rd Avenue) makes for an informed homeowner audience.
For backyard-court work, putting-green inquiries skew noticeably higher in Eagle Lake than in other Maple Grove corridors — Eagle Lake Youth Golf Course is a short drive or walk for most addresses, and homeowners who play regularly often want a multi-hole synthetic putting green with chipping zones at home. Pickleball and multi-sport builds are also common, particularly on the larger golf-course-adjacent lots where setback math works in the homeowner’s favor.
Named landmarks we work near
- Eagle Lake Regional Park (northern shoreline, public lake access + trails)
- Eagle Lake Youth Golf Course (par-3 short course along the corridor’s southern edge)
- Eagle Lake itself (the corridor’s namesake water feature)
- 93rd Avenue North (primary east-west corridor through the residential section)
- Three Rivers Park District trail connections (regional trail system links through Eagle Lake Park)
- Pike Lake Road (eastern corridor edge, connects toward the Bass Lake / Plymouth border)
If you’re inside the corridor bounded roughly by these landmarks, you’re in our normal Eagle Lake service area.
Eagle Lake area — common questions
Do many Eagle Lake homeowners pair pickleball with a putting green? Yes — this is the most common dual-feature project we quote in the corridor. Eagle Lake Youth Golf Course proximity drives the putting-green demand, and pickleball pairs well with it on lots that have room for both a 30-by-60-ft court envelope and a separate 400–800 sq ft green. We can sketch a combined site plan at the survey stage if you want to phase the build across two seasons.
How do golf-course-adjacent lots affect putting-green design? Golf-course frontage usually means more usable backyard depth, fewer neighbor sightlines on the course-facing side, and existing grade work that’s already drainage-friendly. Multi-hole layouts (3–6 holes) with fringe collars and chipping zones are realistic on most of these lots. We measure actual slope and turf-edge transitions during the site survey — the goal is a green that reads naturally against the adjacent course landscape rather than a flat synthetic pad.
Any specific setbacks near the regional park? Standard Maple Grove residential setbacks apply throughout the corridor; the regional park boundary doesn’t add extra restrictions for backyard courts on private residential lots. The city’s pickleball-court rules require 200 ft from neighboring residential structures for dedicated courts (150 ft for dual-use) — we map that against the actual build envelope at the site survey before any quote.
Services we handle in the Eagle Lake area
- Putting green installation — synthetic multi-hole greens, fringe collars, chipping zones. Eagle Lake’s lead service given golf-course proximity. Most builds run $3,500–$15,000 depending on hole count and features.
- Pickleball court installation — backyard pickleball court design and install: acrylic surfacing, fencing, nets, lighting. Most residential builds $20,000–$50,000.
- Multi-sport court installation — combined pickleball / basketball / volleyball / futsal surfaces. Typical residential builds $20,000–$70,000 depending on size and surface choice.
- Backyard basketball court — half-court and full-court installs with concrete pad, acrylic surfacing, in-ground hoops, court-line painting.
- Batting cage installation — netting structures, turf flooring, pitching mounds. Single-lane builds typically $2,500–$8,000+ depending on length and frame system.