A former trampoline park at 618 NW Loop 410 in San Antonio is being converted into a new indoor sports and entertainment destination from Taroko Sports. The company plans a 31,000-square-foot venue at the Park North site, repositioning the space with a broader mix of entertainment offerings and food and beverage components.
The forthcoming center is designed as an all-ages, indoor sports and entertainment hub, combining interactive sports experiences with traditional leisure attractions. Planned features include batting cages and pitching mounds, giving visitors access to baseball and softball practice amenities, along with HitTrax swing suites that pair technology with batting and swing analysis. Bowling lanes and a range of arcade games will round out the entertainment mix, positioning the venue to attract both casual guests and organized group outings.
Food and beverage is a core element of the concept, with the venue set to offer American cuisine on-site. Private party suites are also planned, providing dedicated space for events such as birthday parties, team celebrations, corporate gatherings, and other group functions. The combination of sports programming, gaming, dining, and private event space is intended to create multiple revenue streams within a single indoor footprint.
The San Antonio location is part of Taroko USA’s broader push to expand its footprint in the United States. Taroko USA is the U.S. arm of Taiwan-based TRK Corp., which has developed a portfolio of sports and entertainment facilities in Asia. The company opened its first U.S. venue in Katy last spring in a 20,000-square-foot facility, establishing an initial beachhead for its concept in the U.S. market.
Beyond Texas, Taroko USA operates additional venues in Mesa and Chandler, Arizona, extending the brand across multiple metropolitan areas. These facilities, along with the new San Antonio location, reflect a strategy of scaling a repeatable indoor sports-anchored entertainment model across different regions.
Taroko and its parent, TRK Corp., already control roughly a dozen similar venues in Taiwan. Building on that operating base, the company is now focused on growing its U.S. presence, using facilities like the planned San Antonio center to introduce its format to more American consumers and landlords. The repositioning of the former trampoline park at Park North illustrates how existing entertainment real estate is being reconfigured to host more diversified, sports-centric experiential concepts.


