Tenis Kozerki
A modern, campus-style academy near Warsaw with year-round indoor and outdoor training, smart-court technology, on-site boarding, and a summer Challenger tournament on the same grounds.

A young campus with big-stage ambitions
Tenis Kozerki is a purpose-built tennis campus in the village of Kozerki near Grodzisk Mazowiecki, roughly a half hour from central Warsaw. Opened in 2017, the project began with a simple but demanding brief: bring all the ingredients of high performance to one contained site and make the training week reliable in every season. Today the campus combines courts, an indoor hall, strength and conditioning spaces, pools, a hotel, dining, and a private high school under a single logistical umbrella. That one-site design is the academy’s signature. Players walk between sessions rather than commute, coaches see athletes across multiple contexts in a single day, and families experience an environment that feels both professional and welcoming.
The atmosphere is distinctly European, with a training village vibe that suits steady progression from red ball to first professional events on the same grounds. Everything on the campus is arranged to reduce friction. Balls and baskets are never far, fitness zones sit close to the courts, and even meals are planned to dovetail with practice blocks. The outcome is a place where time is used wisely and attention does not splinter. If your idea of progress is less about driving between scattered facilities and more about accumulating high quality reps, Tenis Kozerki tells a convincing story from the first visit.
Why the setting matters
Kozerki sits just beyond the suburban edge of Warsaw, where tree lines and open space soften the noise of city life. The setting delivers two advantages that matter for development. First, it provides a calm, distraction-light context that helps players of all ages focus on work. Second, it keeps families within easy reach of the capital’s transport network and tournament calendar. Weekend visits are realistic, and trips to or from Chopin Airport are straightforward, which eases the logistics of international play.
Poland’s four-season climate is a design challenge the academy has embraced. Winters shift the emphasis to the indoor hall for technical focus, movement patterns, and serve mechanics. Shoulder seasons blend indoor reliability with outdoor adaptation as temperatures allow. In summer the complex opens wide, and the campus hosts international events, giving juniors a tangible connection between training and competition. The rhythm is deliberate. Athletes move through well-planned cycles rather than chasing good weather across the city.
Facilities designed for repetition, variety, and recovery
Courts and surfaces
Tenis Kozerki offers a broad mix of outdoor hard courts, outdoor clay courts, and a dedicated indoor hard-court hall. The balance of surfaces lets coaches build footwork solutions that travel, while also keeping the training week resilient when conditions change. Outdoor hard is the campus anchor and the stage for the Kozerki Open, an ATP Challenger event that transforms the grounds each summer. Clay brings its own value, especially for point construction, balance, and patience in juniors who are still refining their timing and spacing.
Technology in daily use
The campus leans into technology for objective feedback without losing the human feel of on-court coaching. Smart-court systems automate line calling, capture ball and movement data, and record sessions for later review. Coaches use this stream to confirm what the eye suggests. Players see dispersion charts and serve patterns alongside video clips, closing the gap between feel and real. Because the tech is integrated into everyday practice, it is not a novelty wheeled out for showcase days. It is a steady metric that encourages accountability.
Strength, conditioning, and recovery
Performance is not only about hitting. The on-site fitness facilities sit close to the courts, which makes it easy to alternate between court time and gym work. Age-appropriate strength programs target posture, elastic qualities, and robustness so juniors can tolerate higher volumes as they grow. Recovery is built into the schedule, not tacked on. Athletes use mobility circuits, pool access, sauna, and, when indicated, targeted modalities like cryo to manage load. The location of these spaces matters. Because everything is walkable, there is no lost time shuttling between buildings.
Boarding, meals, and school
Boarding is streamlined through the on-site hotel that serves both visiting families and longer-stay athletes. Rooms are comfortable rather than flashy, with quiet hours and routines that support training. The restaurant understands athlete needs, balancing familiar options with fuel-rich choices that travel well to afternoon sessions. For school-age players the presence of a private high school at the same address is a significant strategic advantage. Academic schedules can be adjusted around tournament travel and training periods, which lowers stress and allows students to pursue real progression on both fronts.
Coaching staff and performance philosophy
Tenis Kozerki operates on a multidisciplinary model. On-court coaches coordinate tightly with strength and conditioning specialists, physiotherapists, nutrition support, and sport psychology. The result is a single weekly plan rather than parallel agendas that compete for time. This is especially important during growth spurts when training load must be tempered by bone and tendon tolerance, and when technical work needs to evolve with changing limb length and timing.
On court the philosophy is pragmatic and test oriented. Sessions start with clear technical goals and specific constraints, then advance quickly into decision-rich environments. Players see a steady diet of situation drills, tie-breakers, and short sets with purposeful targets. Between-changeover feedback is short and actionable. Smart-court data is used to validate trends rather than dominate conversations. The idea is simple. Kozerki wants athletes who can repeat their strengths under pressure and who know how to manage their B level on days when the A level is not available.
Programs for every stage of the pathway
- Tennis Kids PRO introduces ages 4 to 7 to the sport with licensed coaches, playful motor learning, and periodic check-ins so parents see concrete markers of progress. Sessions prize coordination and fun while laying technical foundations that will matter later.
- Competitive juniors move into year-round tracks that expand on-court volume, add structured fitness, and map tournament calendars. Boarders can live on site. Students coordinate with the academy’s school partner to keep academics moving during travel blocks.
- Adults can book performance weeks or custom blocks with a clear brief. Many returning college players and high-level amateurs use these stays to rebuild patterns, sharpen serve and return, and stack meaningful reps leading into league or ITF Masters play.
- Trial or assessment weeks allow families to sample the environment before a long-term commitment. Players finish with a written plan that outlines strengths, priorities, and the training and competition mix recommended for the next phase.
How player development works day to day
Technical development
Kozerki’s technical progressions target stable contact, efficient use of legs and trunk, and racquet paths that create reliable height and depth. Coaches use video to highlight simple cues. Players learn to recognize their contact window, manage spacing with footwork rather than reach, and run a serve routine that holds under score pressure. When juniors see their depth dispersion tighten over weeks, confidence follows.
Tactical growth
Tactical sessions blend set-piece situations with open points and short sets. Coaches introduce constraints that force players to sequence strengths and probe the opponent’s movement. Pattern recognition is a skill honed through repetition. Athletes learn when to play heavy crosscourt, when to step behind the next ball, and how to close space at the net with economy rather than rush. Match debriefs circle back to a few measurable themes to avoid information clutter.
Physical preparation
Strength and conditioning is contiguous with tennis, not an afterthought. Younger athletes focus on coordination, rhythm, and light elastic qualities. Older players progress to structured strength with careful attention to technique. Speed and change of direction live in both the gym and the court warm up. Recovery is part of training culture, with mobility, pool work, and simple sleep hygiene reinforcing what happens on the court.
Mental skills and routines
The academy favors simple tools that scale. Players build pre-point scripts, learn to reset after errors, and conduct brief post-match reflections that look for patterns rather than perfect answers. The presence of psychology support helps convert practice level to match level, which is often the difference in junior progress.
Education that travels
The on-site school partnership is a practical advantage. Teachers and coaches coordinate calendars so that tournament travel does not derail learning. Continuity is the goal. When a student returns from a two-week block of matches, the classroom is ready with realistic catch-up plans. Families appreciate this predictability as much as the players do.
Events, partners, and proof of standard
A meaningful test of any performance center is the level of events it can stage. Each summer the campus dresses for the Kozerki Open, an ATP Challenger event that takes over the outdoor hard courts with full tournament operations. For juniors the message is clear. The surface speed, court surrounds, and daily routines they experience in training are the same context used for professional competition. Ball kids, lines, call time, mixed practice courts in the morning, afternoon matches under heat and crowd noise, all of it is visible up close.
Kozerki also hosts national development activities throughout the year, from junior championships to training camps and seminars. This matters for sparring and peer groups. The calendar brings strong visiting players into the building without athletes needing to travel every week. For competitive teenagers, one week might include a practice set against a national program guest, while the next offers a Tennis Europe event on site. The density of real match play and quality practice is a defining feature.
Alumni, role models, and visiting pros
Top Polish professionals have used the campus around training blocks and competition weeks, and the Challenger fields are strong enough to give juniors a visual reference for speed, offense patterns, and transition standards. Whether a teenager watches a veteran work through serve plus one patterns in practice or sees a doubles specialist rehearse formations, the education is immediate. Role models are not abstract. They are on the adjacent court.
Culture and community life
Despite the professional sheen during tournament weeks, daily life at Tenis Kozerki feels grounded. Kids Days, grassroots leagues, and festivals punctuate the calendar. Younger siblings have places to play, parents meet for coffee after morning drop-off, and the grassy field becomes a social hub in the evenings while older juniors finish fitness. The community approach keeps the complex lively without overwhelming training. It also helps juniors build the social skills that travel with them on tour.
Costs, accessibility, and support
Public court fees are posted seasonally by the recreational side of the complex, but full-time academy tuition and boarding are typically quoted on request. Packages are tailored to the on-court hours, fitness support, tournament coaching, and school integration a family chooses. For those seeking assistance, an academy-linked foundation raises funds for young players based on need and clear objectives. This is not a promise of scholarships, but it does signal that targeted support pathways exist.
Location is a practical strength. The drive from Warsaw’s city center is short enough for regular family visits, and the airport connection makes international blocks less stressful. For families juggling multiple children and commitments, that proximity is a major factor in sustaining a year-round plan.
How Tenis Kozerki compares
Within Europe, a handful of academies share Kozerki’s campus-first logic. The Mouratoglou Tennis Academy campus in France is larger and more global in brand, but its core idea mirrors Kozerki’s focus on a one-stop environment. In Spain, the Emilio Sánchez Academy Barcelona model shows how tightly integrated academics can support ambitious juniors. Closer to home, the BG Tennis Academy in Warsaw offers a city-based pathway that some families prefer for daily variety across clubs. Tenis Kozerki differentiates by giving athletes the feel of a contained training village where nearly every component, from school to recovery, sits within a few minutes’ walk.
What makes it different
- A true campus model in Central Europe. Courts, indoor hall, hotel, pools, restaurant, and school are all within walking distance. The weekly plan is simple, and energy goes into work rather than transport.
- Technology used with intent. Smart-court systems and video are not add-ons. They are embedded in session design and debriefs to validate progress and shape objectives.
- A live tournament pathway on site. The Challenger week brings professional standards to the same courts juniors use year round, which accelerates learning and raises ambition.
- National-system integration. Camps, championships, and visiting squads create a stream of meaningful match play and fresh practice partners without constant travel.
Future outlook and vision
Since 2017 the trajectory has been steady expansion in both hardware and know-how. It is reasonable to expect investment in court capacity, technology, and support services to continue alongside a summer calendar that keeps the campus relevant. The academy’s leadership is focused on continuity of experience more than spectacle. As more families seek year-round solutions in Central Europe, Kozerki is well placed to be a reliable base where juniors can grow into the demands of professional tennis without losing the joy of the game.
The vision is precise. Build a campus where ambitious players can stack high quality days in all seasons, surround them with coaches who collaborate across disciplines, and give them regular contact with competition that reflects the standards they aspire to. It is not about finding a shortcut. It is about making the long road sustainable.
Is Tenis Kozerki for you
Choose Tenis Kozerki if your priority is a contained environment that feels professional but remains human. It suits juniors who respond to structure, measurable feedback, and frequent match play. Families who value on-site boarding and schooling will find the logistics refreshingly simple. Adult competitors and visiting pros can drop in for concentrated blocks with full access to fitness and recovery.
If you prefer daily variety across multiple city clubs, this is not that model. If you want a quiet training village 30 minutes from Warsaw where you can live the habits of performance every day, Tenis Kozerki is worth serious consideration. The campus is young, the ambition is clear, and the pathway from red ball to first pro points runs across the very courts you train on.
Features
- Year-round indoor and outdoor training
- Outdoor hard courts (hosts Kozerki Open / ATP Challenger)
- Clay courts
- Indoor hard-court hall
- Smart-court technology (Zenniz) with automated line-calling and shot/movement data
- Video analysis and session video
- Strength and conditioning gym / fitness center
- Sports science support
- Physiotherapy and medical support
- Sports psychology access
- Nutrition guidance
- Recovery facilities: pools, sauna, cryotherapy
- On-site hotel (boarding options)
- On-site restaurant / dining
- Private high school (Kozerki School) for student-athletes
- Boarding and school integration for juniors
- Tournament hosting and event infrastructure (spectator stands, grass training field)
- Street workout zone and outdoor training areas
- Family-friendly campus layout (playground, communal spaces)
- Proximity to Warsaw city center and Chopin Airport
- Trial and assessment weeks / short programs
- Hosts national federation camps and international junior events
- Integrated multidisciplinary coaching team (on-court coaches, S&C, physio, nutrition, psychology)
Programs
Year‑round High Performance Boarding
Price: On requestLevel: Advanced to ProfessionalDuration: Year‑roundAge: 12–18 yearsFull-time boarding program for competitive juniors focused on measurable weekly progress. Combines daily on-court technical work, tactical training and match play with strength & conditioning, recovery sessions (pool, sauna, mobility) and periodised testing using smart‑court analytics. Includes tournament coaching, travel planning support and periodic written assessments to track development and inform competition schedules.
Student‑Athlete Pathway with Kozerki School
Price: On requestLevel: Intermediate to AdvancedDuration: Academic yearAge: 14–19 yearsIntegrated academic and tennis pathway aligning daily training with school commitments. Students attend the on‑site private school while following a structured tennis and physical development plan. Schedules are coordinated between coaches and teachers to accommodate tournament travel, with emphasis on sustainable volume, motor development during growth, and academic continuity.
Tennis Kids PRO
Price: On requestLevel: BeginnerDuration: Seasonal blocks across the yearAge: 4–7 yearsFoundational program for ages 4–7 that combines play-based learning with structured motor skill development. Licensed coaches teach basic grips, contact skills and movement patterns using short sessions and frequent rotations. Each cycle includes simple benchmarks and a placement assessment to ensure children join age‑ and ability‑appropriate groups and get guided first steps into competition.
Summer High‑Performance Camps
Price: On requestLevel: Intermediate to AdvancedDuration: 1–3 weeksAge: 10–18 yearsIntensive summer blocks that replicate tournament rhythm: morning technical and serve work, afternoon pattern play and match sessions, plus daily objective challenges. Off‑court components include tailored strength & conditioning, mobility and pool recovery. Suited to international and domestic juniors seeking concentrated hard‑court reps and exposure to a campus that stages pro events in the summer.
Pro Training Weeks
Price: On requestLevel: ProfessionalDuration: 1–2 weeksAge: 17+ yearsCustom short blocks for touring professionals and top juniors preparing for events. Sessions use smart‑court data to refine serve patterns, return depth and rally tempo for target surfaces. Program includes on‑site recovery, arranged hitting partners and logistical support to simplify pre‑tournament preparation.
Adult Performance Weeks
Price: On requestLevel: Intermediate to AdvancedDuration: 5–7 daysAge: 18+ yearsCompact, high‑quality training weeks for ambitious adults and returning college players. Daily structure pairs technical mornings with video feedback and afternoon match play with between‑changeover coaching. Strength sessions focus on injury prevention and building repeatable power for serve and primary strokes.
Assessment and Trial Week
Price: On requestLevel: All levelsDuration: 1 weekAge: 10–18 yearsShort immersion for assessment of strokes, movement, competitive habits and physical baseline. Coaches provide a concise written report outlining priorities, recommended training volume and a sample tournament plan to help families decide on seasonal or full‑time enrollment.