Water Savings — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Doraville's redevelopment boom means more homeowners are rethinking their yards—and that's where a putting green makes real sense. Whether you're in the Assembly area or near the Buford Highway corridor, you've probably noticed how much water Georgia summers demand. A synthetic putting green cuts that pressure dramatically while giving you a genuine reason to spend more time outside. We've installed plenty of greens across DeKalb County, and Doraville's mix of newer construction and revitalized neighborhoods has created steady demand from homeowners who want low-maintenance elegance without the thirsty lawn. The thing about a backyard putting green is it's not just about golf—it's about reclaiming your outdoor space and cutting your water bill at the same time. Most of our Doraville clients tell us they wish they'd done it sooner, especially once they realize how much less time they're spending on yard maintenance and how much more they're actually using their backyards. If you've been on the fence about artificial turf for a putting green, the numbers and the lifestyle shift usually convince people pretty quickly.
Doraville sits on typical DeKalb urban clay, which drains slower than what you'd ideally want for a natural grass putting green. That's actually one reason synthetic turf makes so much sense here—you avoid the compaction issues and poor drainage that plague clay-heavy neighborhoods around the MARTA station area and Assembly district. Most Doraville properties we work with fall into the quarter-acre to half-acre sweet spot, which gives us room for a solid 200–400 square foot putting surface without overwhelming the rest of your landscape. Sun exposure varies depending on your street and tree canopy, but we design around your specific sunlight patterns rather than guessing. HOA rules in some Assembly-area properties can be particular about landscape modifications, so we help you navigate those conversations upfront. Installation typically runs smoother in spring and fall when the clay isn't waterlogged or baked hard, though we work year-round. The redeveloped neighborhoods often have tighter soil conditions—not always a problem, just something we account for in base prep.
A natural grass putting green needs consistent watering year-round to stay playable—that's easily 30–40 gallons per week in summer months for a modest 300 sq ft green. Synthetic turf needs zero water for play and minimal rinse-downs for dust. Over a season, you're looking at 600+ gallons saved. For Doraville homeowners on municipal water with drought concerns, that adds up on both your bill and your conscience.
Clay drainage is slower, so we build a solid engineered base instead of just compacting what's there. It takes a bit more prep work than sandy soil would, but it's not a deal-breaker. Your green actually stays firmer and more stable long-term because that clay base holds everything in place—good news for consistent putting surfaces.
Absolutely. We've done greens as small as 150 square feet in tighter Assembly-area and Buford Highway corridor properties. Size doesn't change the water savings or the play value—it just changes the design. Smaller greens are often more fun because every shot matters more.
Most residential putting greens in the area take 2–4 days from start to finish, depending on size and base conditions. We're based about 25 minutes away, so logistics are straightforward. Weather and permit timing (if needed) are usually the real variables, not the installation itself.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.