Do you want to improve your floorball skills faster than others?
👉 Build your own court and train at home.
Not just once a week.
Not only during team practice.
At home. Anytime. No limits.
🎥 Video: How to build your court
How to build a floorball court at home (quick guide)
- Choose a flat surface
- Decide the size of your court
- Prepare the base
- Install the floorball surface
- Add a goal
- Start training
What you’ll need
Nothing complicated.
All you need:
- a flat surface (yard, concrete, asphalt)
- a floorball stick
- a ball
- a goal (or any target)
👉 And most importantly:
FLOORBEE RUNWAY 2.0 – outdoor floorball surface
Why the surface matters the most
Most players train outdoors like this:
- asphalt
- concrete
- paving stones
The result?
❌ the ball bounces
❌ you lose control
❌ you damage your equipment
❌ the training doesn’t transfer into games
👉 This is not real training.
👉 If you want your training to actually work, you need a surface that simulates indoor conditions.
Without it, you're just “playing” — not improving.
The solution
✔ stable surface
✔ ideal ball glide
✔ confident movement
✔ usable anywhere
👉 exactly what you need to make your training translate into real performance
How big should your court be?
2. Decide the size of your court
You don’t need to build a full court.
Start based on your goal:
- 2 m² → shooting & stickhandling
- 4–6 m² → full home training
- 10+ m² → larger training zone / club use
👉 In reality: a smaller area is more than enough for daily training
👉 Tip: start small and expand later
How to build your court (step by step)
1. Choose the location
Ideal surfaces:
- concrete
- asphalt
- paving stones
👉 The surface should be:
- flat
- solid
- without major unevenness
2. Prepare the base
- sweep the area
- remove stones and debris
- level any uneven spots
👉 The better the base, the better the training
3. Install the floorball surface
- start in a corner
- gradually add more tiles
- click them together
👉 no tools needed, just pressure
✔ quick installation
✔ no glue required
✔ easy to disassemble anytime
4. Build the full area
The result:
- solid and stable surface
- no gaps
- ready for training
5. Add a goal
Options:
- official floorball goal – FLOORBEE Terminal IFF – Official floorball goal with net
- training goal – FLOORBEE Dock – Screw-in floorball goal with net
- DIY solution (cones, bench, etc.)
👉 the key is to have a clear target
6. Start training (the right way)
The biggest mistake:
👉 just “playing around”
The right approach:
- consistent training
- ball control in motion
- shooting
- game situation simulation
What will change when you train at home
✔ more repetitions
✔ better ball control
✔ more accurate shooting
✔ greater confidence in games
👉 you’ll notice the difference very quickly
Most common mistakes
❌ wrong surface
❌ uneven base
❌ random training
❌ starting with a space that’s too big
👉 start small and stay consistent
The biggest advantage? A head start
Most players wait for practice.
You:
- train every day
- get more repetitions
- improve faster
👉 Build your court today
FLOORBEE RUNWAY 2.0
= the surface that finally makes training make sense
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
How long does installation take?
Approximately 5–15 minutes depending on the size.
How can I train floorball at home or outdoors?
The best solution is a high-quality floorball surface that simulates indoor conditions. FLOORBEE RUNWAY 2.0 allows you to train anytime — regardless of team practices.
How much space do I need for floorball training?
It depends on your goal:
- 2×3 m → shooting & stickhandling
- 2×4 m → shooting + movement
- 3×4.6 m → full individual training
- 3×6 m → advanced training or multiple players
👉 If you want a larger and more complete training setup, we recommend FLOORBEE RUNWAY 2.0 TRAINING ZONE – Training floorball surface with goal.
What surface is suitable for outdoor floorball?
Regular concrete or paving stones are not ideal — they damage equipment and distort gameplay. RUNWAY 2.0 is a specialized outdoor surface with realistic ball glide and bounce.
Is the surface suitable for concrete or paving?
Yes. A solid, flat base like concrete, asphalt, or paving stones is ideal.
Does training on this surface transfer to real games?
Yes. The surface simulates indoor conditions, so your training directly transfers into game performance.
How quickly can I set up the surface?
You can assemble the area in just a few minutes. No tools or complicated setup required.
Can the surface be adjusted or expanded later?
Yes. Thanks to the modular system of RUNWAY 2.0, you can easily expand or modify the area anytime.




