Garden Pathway — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Sport courts in Crabapple aren't just about having a place to shoot hoops or play tennis—they're about reclaiming your yard from the Georgia clay and actually using your outdoor space year-round. We've installed plenty of courts across Fulton County, and the Crabapple Crossroads and Birmingham Falls areas have some unique advantages when it comes to turf. Your lot size matters here. Most of the estate properties in your neighborhoods have the room to do this right, without feeling cramped or overdone. The real question isn't whether you should add a sport court—it's whether you want to keep dealing with muddy clay patches, dead grass from foot traffic, or spending weekends maintaining bare spots. A quality artificial surface handles the Georgia heat, the occasional ice storm, and constant use from kids and friends. No more excuses about the weather or "the yard's too torn up." We've worked in Crabapple long enough to know what works here, and we're honest about what doesn't. Your neighbors probably have similar-sized yards and similar drainage challenges. A sport court solves both.
North Fulton's rolling clay is both a blessing and a curse for sport courts. The good news: your soil drains eventually. The bad news: that "eventually" part matters when you're installing artificial turf. We always assess the grade and slope of each property around Crabapple—especially in the Birmingham Falls area where some lots sit on pretty steep terrain. Standing water isn't your enemy if the base is prepped correctly, but we've seen too many rushed installations fail because contractors didn't account for how clay behaves after heavy rain. Your existing lawn probably has weak spots, compacted areas, and those stubborn patches where nothing grows except weeds. That's the clay talking. When we install, we work with your natural slope rather than against it, which saves money and headaches down the road. Most Crabapple estate lots are large enough that you don't have to choose between a court and landscaping—you can have both. We just need to plan the layout so your sight lines work and water sheds away from your house. The summer sun is intense here, and quality turf doesn't fade or get too hot to walk on barefoot. Winter frost occasionally hits, but it won't damage modern sport court surfaces the way it damages natural grass.
Absolutely. Clay compacts and holds water differently than other soils. We remove the top layer, install proper drainage rock, and slope the base away from structures. Crabapple's rolling terrain actually works in your favor—we use gravity to manage water flow. Without this step, you'd get pooling under the turf, which ruins the surface and creates safety issues.
Most properties in the Crabapple Crossroads and Birmingham Falls area are large enough to accommodate both. A standard half-court takes about 2,500 square feet. We work with your existing trees, sight lines, and setback requirements. Your HOA guidelines might have rules about court placement—we check those before we start.
Modern sport court turf is engineered for Southern heat. It won't fade or warp in 95-degree weather, and the surface stays cooler than asphalt or concrete. We've installed dozens across Fulton County. Kids actually use them in summer, unlike natural grass courts that become dead, dusty patches.
Site prep typically takes 2–4 weeks depending on your soil, existing grass removal, and drainage work. The actual installation runs 1–2 weeks. Weather can shift the schedule—we avoid heavy rain periods because clay takes time to dry. We'll give you a realistic timeline during the site visit.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.