Spring Special — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
A sport court in your Douglasville backyard isn't just a nice-to-have—it's the difference between your kids begging to stay inside and actually playing outside. We've installed courts across Chapel Hills and Arbor Station long enough to know that Georgia families want durability without the constant maintenance headache. That red clay soil Douglas County sits on? It's beautiful for the landscape, but it's murder on natural grass when you're running basketball or tennis drills on it week after week. Spring is the perfect time to make the upgrade because the ground's workable, the weather's cooperating, and you still have the whole season ahead to enjoy it. Our crew has been building these courts for West Metro families for years—we know the drainage challenges, the sun patterns on your lot, and exactly what it takes to get a court that'll actually hold up. Whether you're thinking about a small half-court for shooting practice or a full multi-sport setup, we'll walk you through what makes sense for your space and your budget. This spring special is built for Douglasville homeowners who are done making excuses about the yard.
Douglasville's Douglas County red clay is excellent for foundation work—terrible for traditional grass courts. That clay base means water doesn't drain the way it does in sandier parts of Georgia, so artificial turf with a proper subsurface system is actually your best bet. Spring rains come heavy here, and we've learned to design courts with perimeter grading that moves water away from your house and toward the lower parts of your lot. Sun exposure varies wildly depending on whether you're in Chapel Hills near the tree lines or in Arbor Station where lots tend to be more open. We scout each property individually because shade patterns shift seasonally—what's shaded in winter might get hammered in July. Most Douglasville residential lots run quarter to half-acre, which usually gives us solid options for a 30x50 court or a smaller 20x40 if you're tighter on space. HOA communities in the area typically require that you get landscape approval before installation, and we handle those conversations regularly—no surprises. The artificial turf we use is engineered specifically for Georgia's heat and humidity, with infill systems that won't compact over time.
Most Chapel Hills and Arbor Station communities do require landscape modification approval. We've worked with dozens of HOAs in Douglas County and handle the submission process for you. Generally, a well-maintained artificial court that matches neighborhood aesthetic gets approved without friction. We'll include site plans and material specs in the application.
Douglas County's clay-heavy soil is actually why artificial turf performs better than natural grass here. We install a engineered base layer that prevents clay from migrating into the turf system. Spring installation lets us work with soil that's moist but not waterlogged, and we grade carefully so water sheds properly away from your house and foundation.
From estimate to finished court, plan on 2-3 weeks for most residential jobs. Spring weather in Douglas County cooperates better than summer heat for installation crews. We schedule aggressively during March and April, so booking early in the season keeps you ahead of the summer rush and lets your family enjoy the court all season.
The pollen and debris from creeks and mature trees in the area means occasional sweeping and power-washing—maybe twice yearly depending on how much the court gets used. We use turf systems designed for the Southeast humidity, and they shed water quickly. No mowing, no dead patches, no seasonal die-off like natural grass deals with.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.