Wheelchair Accessible — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
College Park sits in a unique spot—close enough to Hartsfield-Jackson that you've got the urban energy, but with enough residential neighborhoods (especially around Virginia Ave and Downtown College Park) where families actually have yards to work with. We've installed sport courts across Fulton County for years, and what we're seeing in the 30337 and 30349 zip codes is a real appetite for outdoor spaces that hold up. That South Fulton clay soil? It drains differently than you'd expect, and that matters when you're putting down a surface that needs a solid foundation. A sport court gives you something the grass can't: year-round usability, zero mud after rain, and a playing surface that wheelchair users can navigate smoothly without ruts or soft spots. Whether you're thinking basketball, pickleball, or just a multipurpose court for the neighborhood kids, we can build something that actually works with College Park's climate and soil instead of fighting it.
College Park's clay-heavy soil—typical for South Fulton—can hold water longer than sandy soils, which is why proper base preparation matters more here than in some other Georgia areas. We always recommend a compacted gravel base with our drainage layer to keep moisture from pooling underneath your court surface. Sun exposure varies wildly depending on where you are in relation to the tree canopy around Virginia Ave and Downtown College Park. Some yards get full afternoon sun; others have significant shade from mature oaks. That affects how the surface performs in summer heat and how quickly it dries after rain. HOA rules in some College Park neighborhoods can be specific about court placement and fencing, so we always pull those details before breaking ground. Most residential lots in your area run 40–60 feet deep, which gives us flexibility for a full or half court without eating your entire backyard. The commercial-residential mix means noise considerations matter—we can discuss positioning to keep ball sounds from bothering neighbors if you're close to residential properties.
Absolutely. Clay drains differently than sand, but that's not a dealbreaker—it just means we build a more robust base. We compact gravel, add a perforated drain layer, and slope the court slightly so water moves off instead of sitting. College Park's South Fulton clay actually gives us a stable foundation once we prepare it right.
Yes. That's actually one of the biggest advantages. A well-installed court surface is smooth, firm, and won't develop ruts or soft spots like grass does. Wheelchair users get consistent, predictable traction year-round. We make sure transitions and any surrounding pathways meet accessibility standards too.
Most residential courts take 3–5 days, depending on size and how much site prep the clay soil needs. We're about 35 minutes from most College Park locations, so we can schedule efficiently. Weather can push us a day or two if rain hits mid-project, but we plan around that.
Some do, some don't. We always check your neighborhood's HOA guidelines (or help you request a variance if needed). Downtown College Park and Virginia Ave area rules vary, so it's worth confirming before you commit. We've navigated these conversations many times.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.