Industry Leader — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Dacula homeowners who love golf know the frustration: you've got the space, you've got the passion, but maintaining a natural grass putting green in East Gwinnett's clay-heavy soil is basically a second job. That's where we come in. Our team has installed premium artificial putting greens across the Rabbit Hill and Harbins neighborhoods—from small practice greens tucked beside new subdivision homes to statement pieces that turn backyards into genuine golf destinations. The beauty of synthetic turf here isn't just convenience; it's about working *with* Dacula's climate and soil instead of against it. Your clay base doesn't drain like you'd want for bent grass, and our summers bring humidity that feeds fungus and weeds. An artificial green eliminates those headaches entirely. You get year-round playability, zero maintenance, and the consistent roll you'd expect from a real course—all without watering restrictions or the seasonal die-off that plagues natural greens in our area.
Dacula's newer subdivisions sit on dense East Gwinnett clay, which honestly works *better* for artificial green installation than sandy soil. Your base drains predictably, and we can build a proper sub-base without worrying about settling. What matters more here is sun exposure: if your yard slopes toward Little Mulberry Park or opens to the south and west, you're getting intense afternoon heat. We account for that when selecting turf pile height and infill—too thin and the backing shows in summer, too thick and the ball sits up unrealistically. HOA rules in the Rabbit Hill area tend to be reasonable about landscape features, but we always verify setbacks and any restrictions before design. Most Dacula lots are quarter-acre to half-acre, so we're typically working with 400–800 square feet of usable green space. That's ideal for a primary chipping zone plus an 8–12 foot putting surface. The clay base actually minimizes the need for extensive drainage retrofitting that you'd see in wetter counties north of here.
Gwinnett County doesn't require permits for residential landscape features like putting greens, but your HOA (if applicable) may have design approval steps. We handle all that coordination. In the Harbins and Rabbit Hill neighborhoods, most associations see synthetic greens as an upgrade. We'll document the project and ensure everything meets setback and height requirements before we break ground.
Clay is actually your friend here. It compacts uniformly and drains predictably, unlike sandy soils that settle unevenly. We excavate 4–6 inches, lay a gravel base, add a root barrier, then install our sub-base and turf. The clay gives us a stable foundation, and we've done dozens of installs on similar East Gwinnett lots without settling or poor drainage issues.
Absolutely. Our turf is UV-stabilized for intense Georgia heat and humidity. The infill material drains moisture quickly, so you won't see puddling even in summer storms. We design for sun exposure—if your yard is open to the south, we'll recommend a pile height that resists matting and keeps the ball from sitting up too much in peak season.
Most residential greens in your area run $4,500–$9,000 depending on size, slope, and prep work needed. Flat, clay-based yards in Rabbit Hill and Harbins typically fall on the lower end because we don't need extensive grading or drainage fixes. We provide a free site walk and detailed quote before any work starts.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.