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Artificial turf in Alpharetta neighborhoods like Windward and Crabapple takes a beating. Between Georgia's humid summers, the occasional ice storm, and the heavy foot traffic that comes with newer construction communities, your synthetic lawn can develop worn patches, seams that separate, or infill that compacts unevenly. That's where repair comes in—and it's a lot more straightforward than ripping everything out and starting over. We've worked with plenty of homeowners around the Avalon area and Alpharetta City Center who thought they'd need a full reinstall, only to find out that targeted repairs could restore their turf to like-new condition in a fraction of the time and cost. Whether your kids have worn a path through the backyard or winter weather has stressed your seams, we can assess the damage, identify what's actually fixable, and give you honest guidance on whether repair makes sense for your particular situation. Most issues—drainage problems, UV damage to older turf, infill migration—are totally manageable if you catch them early.
Alpharetta's newer residential lots often come with that challenging North Fulton clay underneath, which means drainage is everything for artificial turf installations. When clay sits beneath your synthetic lawn without proper base preparation, water pools and creates soft spots that shift under weight. Our repair work here frequently involves checking sub-base integrity and raking out compacted infill that's been pushed down by heavy rain or the kind of foot traffic you see in family neighborhoods like Windward. The area also experiences real seasonal stress—summer humidity can accelerate UV degradation on lower-quality turf, and our winter freeze-thaw cycles sometimes cause seam separation if the original installation didn't account for expansion and contraction. Crabapple and the Avalon communities tend to have larger residential yards, which means more complex drainage patterns and longer seam lines to monitor. We always recommend checking your turf's infill depth after 18–24 months; Alpharetta's clay base can compress faster than sandy soil regions, which affects how your turf performs underfoot and how water moves through the system.
If the damage is isolated—a burned patch near the Verizon Amphitheatre side of town, a separated seam, or localized infill loss—repair is your move. We look at the overall turf age, the extent of UV damage, and whether the base is still stable. Most Alpharetta installs from the last 5–7 years are solid candidates for targeted repair. If more than 30% of your yard shows wear or the infill is uniformly compacted across the whole lawn, replacement might be the better long-term choice.
Absolutely. Because North Fulton clay doesn't drain as naturally as sandy soil, we spend extra time inspecting the base during repairs. If water's pooling, we may need to address drainage before we patch seams or refresh infill. This adds a day or two to the job, but it prevents the repair from failing six months down the line. It's common for Windward and Crabapple homeowners to discover drainage issues when we're already on-site for repairs.
Yes. Seam separation is one of our most common repairs in the Alpharetta area, especially after heavy seasonal weather. We reactivate the seam tape, re-glue, and sometimes reinforce with new binding depending on the turf age and condition. Newer installations (within 3–4 years) usually respond well. Older turf may need the entire seam re-done, which we can do without replacing the whole yard.
Repair costs depend on damage scope, not neighborhood. A small seam re-glue or localized patch typically runs $200–$600. Larger repairs—like re-doing infill across a section or addressing base issues—can run $800–$1,500. We quote based on what we find, not zip code. Many Alpharetta homeowners are surprised how affordable repair is compared to what they assumed.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.