As an emerging leisure and entertainment industry, trampoline parks possess distinct industry characteristics in their logistics. They encompass both the supply chain management needs of traditional service industries and the specialized distribution requirements of specialized equipment and sports gear. From a logistics perspective, trampoline park operations can be divided into three dimensions: pre-construction logistics, daily operational logistics, and emergency logistics.
During the construction phase, the core logistics task is the transportation and installation of large equipment. Trampoline park core facilities include steel structural frames, elastic surfaces, protective netting systems, and ancillary entertainment devices. These materials are generally large, heavy, and fragile, placing special demands on the load-bearing capacity of transport vehicles, loading and unloading procedures, and storage conditions. For example, the main trampoline frame often needs to be disassembled into modular components, transported via specialized flatbed trucks, and assembled at specialized facilities, posing a challenge to logistics service providers' solution design capabilities.
Daily operational logistics focuses on the supply of consumables and equipment maintenance. The inventory turnover rate of consumables such as trampoline mats, elastic cords, and safety gear directly impacts operational continuity, necessitating the development of a dynamic replenishment model based on customer flow data. Furthermore, the demand for spare parts required for regular maintenance (such as shock absorber springs and connecting bearings) is often sudden, requiring a rapid response from the supply chain. Some high-end venues also handle cross-border logistics such as customs clearance and commodity inspection for imported equipment, further increasing process complexity.
Notably, trampoline parks also face unique emergency logistics requirements. In the event of equipment failure or a safety incident, repair teams and replacement parts must be dispatched quickly, placing higher demands on the logistics network's regional coverage density and emergency dispatch mechanisms. In the future, as industry standardization accelerates, trampoline park logistics may evolve towards intelligent warehousing and specialized transportation, leveraging IoT technology to achieve visual management and control across the entire supply chain.







