Auto-belay safety hardware
Mechanical auto-belays lower every climber smoothly. No rope team to train, no volunteer belayer, no slack to manage - the hardware catches the fall.
A rock climbing wall is the activity kids line up for before lunch and then line up for again before the bus leaves. Our flagship unit is a 28-foot hydraulic trailer tower with four auto-belay lanes graded from beginner slab to overhang, so the second-grader gets a safe send and the dad in running shoes gets a forearm burn. The trailer rolls in, the crew levels and stakes, the operator powers up the hydraulics, and the wall is climbing in under 90 minutes.
We run the whole block when you want it: the wall, the carnival games, the trackless train, the bounce-house row, and the concessions come on one load-in with one schedule, one COI, and one point of contact for your PE coach, youth pastor, or HR event lead. When the line wraps the lot and a kid rings the top bell, the parents snapping photos at the base are the ones who rebook us next spring.
Call 972-429-4545 or book online - spring field-day Fridays fill by February, and the trailer tower goes first.
Mechanical auto-belays lower every climber smoothly. No rope team to train, no volunteer belayer, no slack to manage - the hardware catches the fall.
Trained, insured ops at every wall. Harness fitting, triple-check of the clip, queue management, and a supervisor who walks the setup every half hour.
Four routes cycle at once. A Frisco ISD 3rd-grade field day runs 600 students through on three one-hour rotations without a line complaint.
Four difficulty grades from slab to overhang. Siblings, parents, and the youth-pastor-in-running-shoes all get a lane that fits.
Trailer tower runs off its own hydraulics - no facilities drop, no ISD electrician at 6am. Inflatable walls pull a standard 110v line.
Wall, carnival games, train, bounce houses, concessions, tents, tables. One call, one COI, one invoice, one load-in window. No eight-vendor chase.
Current DFW climbing inventory - match to your footprint, age range, and event volume.
Our flagship. A 28-foot hydraulic tower with four auto-belay lanes graded from slab to overhang. The unit you have seen at Frisco ISD field days and Prosper church camps.
A 24-foot one-lane inflatable with an auto-belay. Fits a quinceanera courtyard, HOA pool deck, or church gym with a 30ft by 15ft footprint and 26ft overhead.
A 10-foot handhold panel for the toddler-and-preschool crowd. No harness; crash-mat base; perfect alongside the main wall for a sibling-friendly queue.
Two synced lanes with light-tree timers. The head-to-head setup that anchors Sports Party Sundays, youth-night competitions, and corporate family-day relays.
A ground-level traverse wall with angled panels for adult team-build bookings where the harness-and-queue cadence would slow the energy down.
Lava, Everest summit, and volcano-ascent handhold swaps. Loaded in at setup to match a camp theme, VBS week, or corporate brand day.
Every wall runs four posted routes: slab, vertical, crack-technique, and overhang - color-taped so the operator calls the right line for the climber.
Hold patterns reset between bookings. PE coaches request a third-grade slab set; youth retreats request an overhang set; operator swaps in under 20 minutes.
Two trailer towers side-by-side for district-wide field days and megachurch summer camps. Eight lanes, two operators, one supervisor, one load-in.
Availability shifts week-to-week through spring and fall field-day season - if your date is locked, call before the Friday slots fill.
The Trailer Tower
The trailer tower is the one that pulls the photo. The hydraulics raise the climbing faces on the lot; the operator runs the harness-fit and clip check; four lanes cycle climbers at roughly 90 seconds a send, which clears a 120-kid grade level in under an hour. The auto-belay hardware means no volunteer belayer to train and no slack-in-the-rope phone calls to your insurance - the catch is on the unit, every time.
What we bring so the only thing you plan is the rotation schedule:
The tower lands first in the load-in order so the queue lane gets painted and the supervisor walks the PE coach or volunteer check-in through the rules before guests arrive.
The wall works anywhere there is a flat pad, 28 feet of overhead for the trailer tower or a gym ceiling for the inflatable, and a crowd that shows up for a line. These are the DFW events we rebook every year.
Frisco ISD, Prosper ISD, Wylie ISD, and Allen ISD elementary field days - a trailer tower plus carnival-game row plus a trackless train on one bid.
Prestonwood, Stonebriar, Gateway, and Chase Oaks summer VBS weeks and youth-night rallies - the wall pulls the middle-schoolers off the phone.
Circle Ten Council pack days, pinewood-derby socials, and scout rally afternoons - the merit-badge-adjacent activity that anchors the field.
Hall Park, Legacy West, The Star, and Toyota HQ family-day and team-build afternoons - Summit Race Mode slots neatly into the agenda.
Pavilion and parking-lot midways at Frisco Commons, Bethany Lakes Park, and Celebration Park Allen - multi-vendor permits handled in advance.
Twin Creeks, Starcreek, Light Farms, Windsong Ranch, and Phillips Creek Ranch pool-closings, neighborhood socials, and Sweet 16 courtyards.
Will It Work?
Before the trailer rolls, we confirm the lot. A 28-foot tower needs sky, a pad, and a gate clearance the truck can actually turn through. Nine out of ten Frisco, Plano, and McKinney setups clear on the call; the tenth we catch on a facilities walk-through before load-in morning so nobody is staring at a tree limb at 6am.
40ft × 40ft pad for trailer tower 28ft overhead clearance Flat asphalt, concrete, or compacted turf 14ft gate clearance for the trailer PTO onboard - no power drop Crew access lane 10ft wide
ISD parking lots, megachurch campuses, and park pavilion bookings usually clear on the facilities walk-through. HOA common areas occasionally need a trailer reroute around a decorative arch or landscape bed - we scout it on the call so there are no surprises at load-in.
Every climbing wall booking ships with the same standard kit:
Climbing is an attendant-run activity - no self-clip, no parent-at-the-belay. The supervisor walks your PE coach or volunteer check-in crew through the posted rules at load-in.
Same-day delivery and setup throughout the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex:
Travel fees may apply for events outside our standard radius - call 972-429-4545 for a quote.
Field-day and fall-carnival season (late April through early May, late September through early November) is our tightest window. Frisco ISD, Prosper ISD, Wylie ISD, and Allen ISD PE departments usually lock the wall in February or March for a spring field day. Church camps and VBS weeks book by early April. Corporate team-build bookings at Hall Park, Legacy West, and The Star fill six to eight weeks out. Winter and mid-summer have more flexibility.
The trailer tower holds climbers from age five through adult on a 40-to-250-pound weight window, and routes are graded from beginner slab to overhang so siblings and parents can all take a lane. The inflatable single-lane wall runs age four and up on a 40-to-220 range. The kids soft-play climb panel is a 10-foot no-harness unit for the toddler-to-four crowd with a crash-mat base. The operator sizes the harness and confirms the clip before every climb.
Every wall ships with a trained, insured operator - we do not hand a PTO volunteer the harness and walk away. The auto-belay hardware, climbing harnesses in youth and adult sizes, helmets on request, handholds, and the safety mat base all come with the unit. The operator triple-checks the clip, calls the wall, runs the queue, and resets the belay between climbers. Load-and-go cadence is roughly 90 seconds per climber.
The trailer tower is a 28-foot outdoor unit - it will not clear most gym ceilings, so for indoor bookings we bring the 24-foot inflatable single-lane wall or the low-height kids soft-play panel, both of which fit a standard elementary-gym or megachurch-youth-room ceiling. The trailer tower runs on its own onboard PTO, so no power drop is required. The inflatable walls pull a standard 20-amp 110v outlet within 75 feet.
Same-day delivery across Frisco, Plano, McKinney, Allen, Prosper, Wylie, Celina, Rockwall, Rowlett, Royse City, Sachse, Murphy, Parker, Dallas, Fort Worth, Arlington, Garland, and Denton. We regularly stage walls at Frisco ISD and Prosper ISD field days, Prestonwood, Stonebriar, Gateway, and Chase Oaks youth events, HOA pool-closings at Twin Creeks, Starcreek, Phillips Creek Ranch, Light Farms, and Windsong Ranch, Circle Ten Council scout rallies, and city bookings at Frisco Commons Park, Bethany Lakes Park, and Celebration Park Allen.
Climbing operations pause for any lightning strike within 10 miles and resume 30 minutes after the last strike per industry standard. Sustained winds above 25 mph halt the trailer tower because the auto-belay cables swing. Light rain does not stop climbing, but a wet handhold pattern makes us pause to towel and chalk. If the morning forecast is clearly unsafe we call you before the trailer rolls and reschedule with no penalty - the spring-storm weeks that hit DFW field days are exactly why we build the rain clause in up front.
Call 972-429-4545 or book online - spring and fall field-day Fridays fill by February, and the trailer tower goes with the first PE department that locks a date.