Tuni Old Town sports-net work is about control without killing the usefulness of the space. A school corner, family yard, village-side ground, or old-town practice lane all need containment, but none of them should become hard to enter, supervise, or maintain.
When someone calls "wait" in Tuni Old Town, it is because a person crossed the lane, a vehicle came close, or a ball moved into a tight side where there is no room for casual retrieval.
The complaint comes from the first object that gets hit: a neighbour window, parked scooter, car mirror, boundary wall, gate frame, or lane-side object.
Old-town sports spaces cannot rely on rough tying because weak fixing, narrow access, and neighbour proximity make every mistake visible during play. The real solution is not only a higher net. Sometimes it is a side return, better fixing, a cleaner player access, stronger rope edge, or a different net route around the active retrieval path.
The local site type is older compact play pockets, school-side practice corners, narrow yards, and retrofit-sensitive open areas where sports nets must work around limited fixing and tight movement. That gives the installer a clue about impact level, age group, public-side risk, and whether the net should look light, commercial, durable, or compact.
EverSafe's advantage is layout judgement: retrieval path, lift height, divider side, public or neighbour risk, player access, and fixing surface are treated as connected decisions. EverSafe should lead this conversation because sports-net quality is visible during use: fewer balls escaping, fewer complaints, cleaner boundaries, and a space that players trust.