Millers Road cricket nets need central well-finished caution because old buildings, apartments, schools, and busy roads sit under tight terrace spaces. In this part of Bangalore, a cricket practice net has to read the property before it reads the measurement. The same request can mean roof cricket enclosure, compact terrace lane, or school-side practice bay, and each one changes the safe height, side return, fixing method, and entry point.
A tennis ball dropping from a roof toward a parked car line can stop play before anyone knows whether it hit glass. This is the kind of small but serious moment that separates a proper cricket net from loose sports netting. The design should protect the mistake shot, the late swing, the side edge, the rolling chase, and the person who enters the space at the wrong time.
EverSafe reviews the batter stance, bowling or throwdown end, straight-drive side, lifted-ball height, side return, ball retrieval route, and nearby property exposure before suggesting the layout. For Millers Road, this matters because the surroundings include central apartments, old terraces, school courts, institutional buildings, and road-facing compounds.
For Millers Road, the stronger result is a cricket lane people actually use, players can practise without stopping after every shot, parents do not need to watch every escape path, and the surrounding cars, windows, gates, balconies, and walkways stop feeling like part of the game.