New Construction — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Building a new home in Crabapple? You've picked one of North Fulton's most desirable areas—those rolling estates around Birmingham Falls and Crabapple Crossroads are stunning. But here's what every builder and homeowner discovers: getting a pristine lawn established on clay-heavy soil while juggling construction schedules and Georgia's intense summer heat is a real headache. That's where a putting green comes in. Whether you're finishing your landscape in the 30004 or 30009 zip codes, an artificial putting green gives you that polished, resort-quality green space without fighting clay compaction, shade patterns under mature trees, or waiting months for sod to establish. We've installed dozens of these in North Fulton's estate neighborhoods, and homeowners love them during new construction when the rest of the yard is still settling. No mud tracked into the house. No brown patches while everything else gets landscaped. Just a playable, gorgeous focal point ready to go.
Crabapple's rolling topography and clay-dominant soil create some unique challenges—and opportunities. Those estate lots around Birmingham Falls often have elevation changes that actually work beautifully for putting greens, especially if you're thinking about contouring. The clay here tends to hold moisture longer than sandy soils, so drainage beneath the turf is critical; we always specify a proper base and perforated underlayment to prevent standing water after Georgia's heavy summer storms. Shade patterns matter too. Many homes in this area sit on wooded lots with oaks and pines that create dappled light—perfect for artificial turf, honestly, since real grass struggles there anyway. Most new-construction estates in Crabapple run between 0.5 and 2 acres, giving plenty of room for a well-positioned green without eating your whole yard. HOA communities here typically have landscape guidelines, but artificial putting greens rarely trigger pushback since they're clearly maintained. We recommend scheduling installation after grading and before final landscaping touches—it's easier to tie in pathways and irrigation when the green's already down.
Absolutely. While your foundation cures and grading settles, an artificial green gives you a finished landscape feature that survives heavy equipment traffic and doesn't require establishment time like sod. Many Birmingham Falls homeowners install them in phase one, then add other plantings around them. It's one less thing to fret about while managing builder timelines.
Clay compacts and holds water, so we dig out 4–6 inches, add a crushed-stone base for drainage, then lay perforated underlayment before the turf. This prevents the soggy conditions that plague real grass here. Rolling terrain is actually an asset—we can build subtle slopes for authentic green play without worrying about water pooling.
Yes. Artificial turf doesn't need sunlight, so those shaded areas under oaks and pines are ideal spots. Real grass dies there anyway. Many estates around Crabapple Crossroads have mature canopy cover, and greens thrive in dappled or partial shade where natural grass fails.
Site prep and base work typically take 2–3 days depending on lot size and grading. We're about 35 minutes from most Crabapple addresses. Smaller residential greens are often complete in a week from first site visit to final walkthrough—fast enough to fit your new-construction schedule without delays.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.