Subdivision Approved — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Sport courts have become the centerpiece of so many Acworth backyards, and honestly, it makes sense. Whether you're in the Lake Acworth area or over near Downtown, you've got families who want basketball, pickleball, or tennis right outside their door—without the mud, the constant maintenance headaches, or the wear patterns that natural grass creates after a few months of serious use. We've installed quite a few of these in Cobb County, and the feedback is always the same: people wish they'd done it sooner. The thing about Acworth specifically is that your yards tend to be generous enough to work with, but you've also got that clay soil situation and seasonal water that makes traditional surfaces problematic. Artificial sport courts sidestep all of that. You get a surface that's ready to play on year-round, drains properly even with our Georgia rainfall patterns, and actually gets better with age instead of worse. No raking, no reseeding, no soft spots by July. Just a solid, consistent playing surface that holds up to real use.
Acworth's got some unique characteristics that matter for sport court installation. That Cobb County clay you've got—especially if you're near the Lake Acworth neighborhoods—tends to hold moisture longer than sandier soils, which is why drainage becomes non-negotiable for any outdoor court. We design our base layers with that in mind, making sure water moves away from the playing surface rather than pooling underneath. Sun exposure varies considerably depending on your lot's orientation and tree coverage, which affects both the turf's lifespan and how comfortable it is to play on during summer afternoons. Some properties around Cauble Park area have mature trees that provide natural afternoon shade; others get full southern exposure. That matters because it changes which turf grade we recommend and whether you'll want lighter-colored lines. Homeowners in the Lake Acworth subdivisions especially need to verify HOA landscape requirements before installation—most welcome sport courts, but a few have specific color or border standards we'll need to confirm upfront. Acworth yards also tend to have decent square footage, which means we're usually working with space that allows for regulation-sized courts or close to it, rather than cramped installations. We're only seven minutes from our shop, so we can be responsive if adjustments come up during the install.
Absolutely. We install a engineered base layer specifically designed for Cobb County clay soil that manages water better than the native dirt alone ever would. Even during heavy Acworth seasonal rainfall, water percolates through the turf backing and drains laterally away from the court. We've got installations that've handled multiple heavy storms without pooling. The key is getting the grading right at the start.
Most Acworth subdivisions are sport-court friendly, but approval requirements vary. We handle the legwork with your HOA—we'll pull their specific guidelines, discuss color options and border standards, and make sure everything's documented before we break ground. It typically takes a week or two, so we factor that into your timeline.
Basketball or tennis runs roughly 47 by 94 feet, but Acworth yards often give us room to work with. If you've got less space, we build to your lot's actual dimensions—shorter courts, single-sport layouts, or multi-use zones all work well. We'll measure your property and show you exactly what fits.
Premium turf typically costs 15–25% more upfront and gives you better UV resistance, softer playing feel, and longer lifespan in Acworth's sun. Basic grades work fine for casual use, but if you're playing regularly or want durability into year 10+, premium pays off. We'll walk you through the options based on your actual usage.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.