Edge Options — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Building a sport court in Buckhead isn't like laying turf in the suburbs. Your lot in Tuxedo Park, Paces, or Peachtree Hills is probably smaller, your neighbors are closer, and the expectations around curb appeal run high. We've installed sport courts throughout this ZIP code cluster—30305, 30309, 30324, 30326, 30327—and we understand what matters here: a court that performs like a pro installation but doesn't dominate your backyard or clash with the architectural character around Lenox Square and Phipps Plaza. Artificial turf for basketball, tennis, or multi-sport use has come a long way. Modern systems drain fast, handle Georgia's humidity without turning into a swamp, and they look sharp year-round. The real question isn't whether it'll work—it's whether your yard can accommodate it, how deep your base needs to be given the clay soil under most Buckhead properties, and whether your HOA has guidelines you need to follow. We handle all that upfront, so you're not finding out mid-project that you need a variance or a different drainage strategy.
Buckhead's underlying Fulton clay is dense and doesn't drain naturally the way sandy soils do. When we build a sport court here, we're engineering the drainage system from the ground up—usually a compacted stone base, then a permeable underlayment layer, then the turf itself. That clay actually works in your favor for stability, but it means we can't skip steps or cut corners on prep work. Most Buckhead lots are tight, too. You've got mature trees (shade is real), property lines that sit close to neighbors, and often mature landscaping you want to preserve. We design courts that fit the space without feeling cramped, and we're experienced at working around existing trees and hardscaping. Humidity is another factor. We specify turf systems with excellent drainage and infill materials that resist compaction and keep the surface cooler during Atlanta summers. Many Buckhead HOAs have design guidelines—not restrictions on artificial surfaces, necessarily, but preferences around colors and sightlines. We'll review your deed restrictions before we quote, so you're never blindsided. Installation typically takes 3–5 days depending on base depth and court size.
Most do, but it varies by community. Neighborhoods like Tuxedo Park and Paces have different standards. We always pull and review your deed restrictions before quoting. Some HOAs want earth-tone infill colors or screening. We've never run into a blanket ban on artificial courts in Buckhead—just specifics about finish and integration. We handle the compliance piece so you don't have to.
Clay is dense, which is good for structural stability but bad for natural drainage. We build a proper base system—compacted stone, drainage fabric, sometimes a perimeter French drain. The upfront work is more involved than sandy-soil installs, but it ensures your court stays dry even after heavy rain and lasts longer.
Yes, if you're realistic about dimensions. A half-court or small multi-sport surface (say, 30×40 feet) fits many Buckhead properties. We design around trees, setback rules, and sight lines. We've built courts in Peachtree Hills and Paces on lots you'd think were too tight—it's about smart layout and working with your existing landscape.
Site visit and quote usually happen within a week of your call. If you move forward, we schedule the work based on weather and your availability—typically 3–5 days for install. You can play on it immediately after. From first contact to game day is usually 2–4 weeks, depending on HOA approval timelines, if required.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.