Urgent Install — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Chattahoochee Hills is built on some beautiful rolling terrain, and that's exactly why sport courts here need to be done right. Your property in Serenbe or out in the Rico area probably sits on those South Fulton clay-heavy soils that drain differently than what you'd find closer to Atlanta, and that matters when you're installing artificial turf that's going to handle everything from summer heat to the occasional heavy rain. We've worked with homeowners across Fulton County who wanted a multipurpose court for basketball, tennis, or just general play—and we know the specific challenges these neighborhood lots present. Whether you're dealing with uneven grading on a larger estate property or you need a court that won't shift with seasonal moisture changes in our soil, we handle the prep work that most installers skip. Your court needs to account for South Fulton's landscape realities, not just look good in a brochure. That's the difference between a court that holds up and one that becomes a headache in a year or two.
The rolling hills around Chattahoochee Hills and Serenbe mean most residential lots have natural grade changes that need proper handling before turf goes down. Our clay-dominant soil composition here in South Fulton holds moisture longer than sandy soils, so base preparation and drainage layers become critical—not optional. Many properties, especially in the Rico area, sit on larger estate lots where sun exposure varies dramatically across your available space. A court facing southeast toward Cochran Mill Park might get different afternoon heat than one tucked into a wooded corner. HOA guidelines in Serenbe are generally favorable toward sports installations if they're well-maintained and visually integrated, but we always verify before breaking ground. The substrate work we do accounts for our soil's behavior during wet winters and the thermal expansion that happens during Georgia's hot summers. Your court's base, infill choice, and drainage system all need to respect the specific conditions on your property—not a generic formula.
Absolutely. Clay holds water differently than sandy soil, so we add extra drainage layers and sometimes use a gravel subbase that prevents moisture from pooling under your court. We've installed enough courts on South Fulton properties to know that skipping this step causes problems come winter. Your base gets built to handle our local soil behavior, not some national standard.
Yes, and it's something we do regularly in rolling neighborhoods like yours. We grade and level the area, build proper drainage to work with your natural slope, and make sure water runs away from the court surface. The prep work is more involved than flat properties, but the final court performs just as well.
We typically recommend a silica-sand infill blend that handles our humidity without retaining excessive moisture, plus it stays cooler underfoot than some alternatives during peak summer. Some homeowners add an acrylic top layer for extra durability against UV exposure and foot traffic, which we see a lot of in active Rico-area households.
Most residential courts take 3–5 days from site prep through final lines. We schedule around local weather patterns—we avoid installing right before heavy rain forecasts because our clay soil takes time to stabilize. We'll confirm timing once we assess your specific lot conditions.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.