BTM Layout cricket nets need compact-lane control because parking, delivery movement, and play overlap in seconds.
A ball rolls under a parked bike, a delivery rider turns in, and the batter waits while the fielder crawls near the tyre. That is the kind of moment a cricket practice net has to solve: not only the visible opening, but the path from bat to risk side.
Near outer village roads. Cricket is different from a general play-area net because the force repeats in a predictable direction. The same straight drive, pull shot, lofted hit, or mistimed edge keeps testing the same side again and again.
In BTM Layout, EverSafe reads the lane from the batter stance first, the bowling or throwdown end, straight-drive line, side return near parking, top-cover need, coach visibility, retrieval route, and entry point are reviewed together before height or mesh path is finalised.
Near outer village roads, a useful cricket lane should let practice continue. It should not make the coach shout after every hard hit, should not send children outside after rebounds, and should not leave parked cars, scooter mirrors, glass fronts, home windows, compound gates, signboards, pedestrians, and neighbour-side items exposed after installation. So material and access are reviewed together.
The right BTM Layout result is the one players stop noticing for the right reason: the ball stays inside the practice path, the coach can see the drill clearly, and nearby homes or vehicles stop feeling like part of the session.