Near Me — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Alpharetta's got some seriously competitive families, and if your kids are into basketball, tennis, or any sport that needs a dedicated court, you know how frustrating it is to drive across town every time they want to practice. We've installed artificial sport courts throughout Windward, the Avalon area, and Crabapple—neighborhoods where homeowners understand that a quality court at home saves time, money, and sanity. The newer construction in North Fulton means most yards here have solid bones, but that clay-heavy soil underneath? It's exactly why artificial turf outperforms concrete or packed earth in our climate. You get year-round playability without worrying about water pooling after Georgia's heavy spring rains or the court turning into a dust bowl by August. Whether your lot backs up to one of Alpharetta's tree lines or sits in full sun near Avalon, we size and build courts that work with your actual property—not some generic template. It's the difference between a court that looks good in photos and one your family actually uses.
Here's the reality of Alpharetta yards: most properties built in the last 10-15 years sit on clay subsoil with decent drainage potential, but only if the base layer is done right. We see a lot of lots in Windward and around Avalon with mature trees on one side and afternoon sun exposure on the other—that's actually ideal for sport courts because you get natural shade relief without moss or algae buildup that happens in permanently shaded areas. The Fulton County clay also means standing water was probably a headache before you installed turf; artificial courts eliminate that entirely. HOA rules in neighborhoods near Alpharetta City Center tend to be stricter about court placement and fencing, so we factor in setbacks and sight lines early. Lot sizes around Crabapple vary widely—some are quarter-acre, others are larger—which means court dimensions need to be customized. We don't force a full-size basketball court onto a space where a multi-sport 30x40 makes more sense. The Georgia heat means your turf infill—sand or rubber—impacts how hot the surface gets in July; we'll walk you through that trade-off based on your family's use patterns.
Not always. Our North Fulton clay actually compacts well and sheds water reasonably fast if we grade the base correctly. We're usually looking at a 2–4% slope and a gravel base that works with your existing drainage, not against it. If your lot's already had water problems, we'll recommend a French drain edge, but most Alpharetta yards don't need it.
Absolutely. We build courts from 20x30 up to full 50x94 basketball. Lot size, tree placement, and neighbor proximity all matter. We'll come measure and show you realistic options—sometimes a multi-sport court makes way more sense than cramming a single-sport build into tight space.
With rubber infill, surface temps can hit 140–160°F in July. Sand-based systems run cooler. We'll discuss your family's tolerance and use patterns—morning practice versus all-day play changes the recommendation. Shade from existing trees helps a lot.
Most approve them, but setbacks and fencing rules vary. We've worked with nearly every HOA board in the area and know what documents they want upfront. We'll help with the submission so you're not guessing.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.