Garage Floor — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Sport courts in Dacula have become a genuine game-changer for families living in the Rabbit Hill and Harbins areas. Between the newer subdivisions popping up around East Gwinnett and the proximity to Little Mulberry Park and Fort Yargo, there's real appetite for outdoor recreation space—but not everyone has the budget or patience for constant grass maintenance. That's where artificial turf sport courts come in. We've installed dozens across Gwinnett County, and Dacula homeowners consistently tell us the same thing: they wanted a dedicated space for basketball, pickleball, or general play without spending weekends fighting red clay stains and bare patches. The clay-heavy soil here means natural grass courts demand constant attention just to stay playable. A properly installed synthetic court gives you year-round usability, zero mud tracking into the garage, and honestly, better ball response than most residential grass ever could. We're local enough to understand Dacula's landscape quirks and far enough along in our track record that we know exactly what works.
Dacula sits on East Gwinnett's characteristic red clay, which drains differently than you might expect—sometimes slower than sandy areas, sometimes faster depending on grading. This actually works in your favor for sport court installation because we can engineer proper base layers that prevent water pooling and extend your court's lifespan. The subdivisions around Rabbit Hill tend to have varied lot sizes; we've worked with everything from tight backyards to sprawling half-acres, so there's almost always a court configuration that fits. Sun exposure varies significantly depending on your lot's tree coverage and orientation—morning shade near some of the wooded sections, afternoon sun in the newer developments. We assess this on-site because it affects both turf selection and long-term surface performance. Most Dacula HOA communities allow sport courts provided they meet setback and sight-line guidelines; we handle those conversations and can pull your specific deed restrictions to make sure we're compliant from day one. Installation logistics are straightforward since we're 40 minutes out, and we've got the grading and drainage experience to handle the clay-soil conditions without surprises.
Not with proper base preparation. East Gwinnett's clay does track onto natural grass relentlessly, but synthetic courts are sealed from below. We lay down a compacted base that prevents clay from wicking up through the turf fibers. Occasional surface sediment brushes off easily, and it won't stain like it would on organic grass. We've installed courts in clay-heavy pockets all over Gwinnett, and staining simply isn't a real maintenance concern.
Permits depend on your specific HOA and property class. Gwinnett County doesn't require special permits for residential turf courts under most circumstances, but some subdivisions in Rabbit Hill and Harbins do have architectural review boards. We pull your property records and deed restrictions upfront and coordinate any approvals. It's part of our installation process, not an afterthought.
Most residential courts take 3–5 days from base prep through final lines. We work with your yard's existing grading and clay conditions, so the timeline depends partly on whether we're doing significant drainage work. We'll give you a firm schedule before we start and stick to it. Drying and curing means you can use the court within a week, usually sooner.
Absolutely. Dacula's summers are humid, sure, but modern sport-court turf is engineered for exactly this climate. Natural grass dies back or goes dormant; synthetic stays consistent year-round. No mud, no brown patches in July, no raking debris off the court before every game. Families around Fort Yargo and the newer subdivisions use their courts spring through fall without the seasonal frustration of lawn maintenance.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.