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Padelcross Club De Padel

San Juan de Aznalfarache, Spain
3.9(191 reviews)

Parcela 6.1, Junto a Gasolinera Bp Cross y a, Parque Comercial Alavera, s/n, Carretera Sevilla Coria, San Juan de Aznalfarache, Sevilla, Andalucía, Spain, 41120

Indoor Courts
Outdoor Courts
Covered Courts
Singles Play

Membership & Pricing

Padelcross Club de Pádel sits in Parque Comercial Alavera (parcela 6.1) beside the BP Cross petrol station on the Sevilla–Coria road in San Juan de Aznalfarache, on the Aljarafe side of Sevilla. The club pitches itself around coaching quality and four indoor panoramic courts that stay playable through rain and winter evenings. Surfaces use high-density artificial turf (about 52,000 tufts per m²) under cover. Players can book through Playtomic or the Syltek portal at padelcross.syltek.com/booking. Around the courts you get free parking, a padel shop, showers, a cafeteria, Wi‑Fi and wheelchair access. Opening runs roughly 9:00–22:30 daily; daytime slots before 18:00 are priced without floodlights, with lighting available as a €4 add-on per booking when needed.

Facilities

Book online via Playtomic (club Padelcross) or padelcross.syltek.com/booking. Phone or WhatsApp 636 449 374. Email padelcross@gmail.com. Flexible daily reservations 9:00–22:30. Padel lessons for all levels, plus tournaments and special events per club listings. Pricing is slot-based through the booking engines rather than published membership tiers on the open web.

Opening Hours

Monday7:00 AM – 11:00 PM
Tuesday7:00 AM – 11:00 PM
Wednesday7:00 AM – 11:00 PM
Thursday7:00 AM – 11:30 PM
Friday7:00 AM – 11:00 PM
Saturday7:00 AM – 11:00 PM
Sunday7:00 AM – 11:00 PM

Reviews (5)

Hatim Berrouga month ago

It's the first time in my life I played almost at night with the lights off !

Jose Antonio Moya Cabas5 years ago

Ok

Jose Dominguez Dominguez3 years ago

Normal

Pablo Estebana month ago

Played on December 25th from 10:00-11:30. Visibility on the court is completely zero. It doesn't matter which of the four courts you play on. The lights are off (to save money), and for the first half hour, the changing light made it impossible to see where the ball was going. Even after the sun went down, the problem persisted because the lights are still off. Furthermore, the court is completely unmaintained. Three kilos of sand, slippery... Be careful of injuries. Never again.

Domingo Delgado3 weeks ago

Yesterday, January 8th, we had a match from 9:00 PM to 10:30 PM, and the lights went out at 10:28 PM. You might think that 2 minutes isn't enough to get upset about, but being in a tie break and not being able to finish it because you have a clock incorrectly configured for the lights to turn off is a bit annoying.