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Dallas, Georgia's neighborhoods—from the Silver Comet Trail area to Seven Hills—are booming with new construction and families who want their yards to work as hard as they do. A sport court isn't just about basketball or tennis anymore. It's a surface that handles the Georgia heat, doesn't turn into a mud pit after rain, and actually gets used year-round instead of sitting there looking patchy and worn. We've installed plenty of these in Paulding County, and honestly, the families we work with wish they'd done it sooner. Your kids can shoot hoops in July without scorching their feet. You can have friends over for a pickup game without worrying about the red clay underneath turning everything into a mess. And unlike grass—especially in yards built on that dense Paulding County clay—you're not fighting nature every weekend. LawnLogic is just 30 minutes away, so we understand exactly what Dallas homeowners need. We'll come see your yard, talk through what a sport court actually looks like installed in your space, and give you a real quote with no pressure. That's how we work.
Paulding County's red clay is beautiful, but it's not forgiving when it comes to drainage and durability. Grass roots struggle in that dense soil, which is exactly why a sport court makes sense here. The clay underneath needs proper base preparation—we don't skip steps on that—because standing water and shifting soil are enemies of a level playing surface. Dallas gets hot summers, so we size courts to take advantage of shade from mature trees if you have them, especially on the Silver Comet Trail side of town where tree cover is more established. Newer Seven Hills construction often means smaller lots and HOA guidelines that actually favor low-maintenance surfaces. We've seen plenty of HOA documents that prefer artificial courts to traditional grass or gravel alternatives. Installation timing matters too—spring and fall are ideal in Georgia, when the ground isn't baked hard and contractors aren't fighting weather delays. Your soil type and property slope get assessed during the free quote. Most Dallas yards we work with are 30-by-40 or 40-by-60 feet for a functional sport court, but we size everything to fit your actual space and budget.
Summer temperatures spike in Paulding County, and yes, synthetic court surfaces get warm—but not unsafe. We use materials rated for Georgia heat that provide consistent ball response even in July. Darker surfaces absorb more heat than lighter ones, so that's part of the conversation during your quote. Most families plant shade trees or position courts strategically to avoid peak afternoon sun.
Red clay drains poorly on its own, which is why proper base prep is critical. We excavate, grade, and install a perimeter drainage system before the court surface goes down. This prevents water pooling and keeps the clay from shifting underneath. It's more work upfront, but it means your court stays level and playable year after year.
Most Dallas HOAs, especially in Seven Hills and newer subdivisions, actually approve sport courts because they're cleaner and lower-maintenance than grass. We've reviewed dozens of Paulding County HOA documents. Always check your specific rules first, but artificial courts typically pass where grass alternatives don't.
A typical residential sport court takes 5-7 working days from start to finish, depending on site prep and weather. We schedule Dallas installations around your availability and coordinate excavation, base work, drainage, and surface installation. Paulding County weather can delay projects, so we plan for seasonal windows.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.