Vs Concrete — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Adairsville homeowners have been asking us the same question for years: "Why would I pour concrete where I could have a putting green instead?" The answer usually comes down to the view from your back porch and what you actually want to do out there. Concrete gets hot, cracks in our freeze-thaw winters, and frankly, it's boring. A putting green gives you something to use—a reason to step outside, practice your short game, or just spend time with family in your yard. We've installed dozens of them across Bartow County, from the rolling properties near Barnsley Gardens to the tighter lots in downtown Adairsville. The real shift happens when homeowners realize that artificial turf isn't just about looks. It's about reclaiming your outdoor space year-round without the headaches of real grass maintenance. Concrete was always the easy default, but easy doesn't mean it's right for your property or your lifestyle. Whether you're thinking about converting an existing patio area or building something new, we've got the experience and the local knowledge to make it happen. Adairsville's terrain and our Bartow County clay present specific challenges, but that's exactly why you want someone who knows this area working on your project.
Bartow County's heavy clay soil creates drainage challenges that matter even before we start talking about your putting green installation. If you've got concrete now, you've probably noticed water pooling or settling issues—that clay underneath doesn't let moisture escape easily. When we install a putting green, we account for this from the ground up. The subsurface prep in Adairsville typically requires better base layer management than you'd see in sandier regions. Our winters aren't brutal, but we do get freeze-thaw cycles that can shift an improperly installed system. Most Adairsville lots we work on range from modest quarter-acre residential spaces to larger properties toward Barnsley Gardens. Shade patterns vary significantly depending on mature trees—common throughout this area—so we assess sun exposure carefully during the site visit. Whether you're in a neighborhood with HOA guidelines or on a rural property with more freedom, we design systems that look natural and perform through our humidity and occasional heavy rain. The choice between concrete and turf usually comes down to drainage and usability; clay soil actually favors the turf option because we engineer proper subsurface management rather than relying on surface slope.
Not harder, just different. Heavy clay means we spend extra attention on base preparation and drainage layers. Concrete relies on surface slope to shed water, but clay doesn't cooperate with that approach. A properly installed putting green system actually works better because we create engineered drainage beneath the surface. We've done this across Bartow County enough times to know exactly what works.
Concrete is static—it cracks, heats up, and doesn't give you anything to do. A putting green is functional. You get year-round practice space, better drainage performance in our clay, no cracks or settling issues, and honestly, better curb appeal. Neighbors near Barnsley Gardens and downtown notice the difference immediately.
Absolutely. Our freeze-thaw cycles are mild compared to northern states, and we design systems with proper subsurface management so frost heave isn't an issue. The turf itself stays playable year-round. It won't frost-crack like concrete does, and you'll actually use it more consistently throughout the year.
We see everything from small practice greens (600–800 sq ft) tucked into existing patio spaces to larger 1,200+ sq ft layouts on bigger properties. Most Adairsville homeowners go for a kidney or oval shape that flows naturally with their landscape. We customize based on your lot size, sun exposure, and what you actually want to practice.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.