Pool Deck Edge — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Your pool deck is where Duluth summers come to life. Whether you're in Sugarloaf or the Parsons area, that concrete or wood surrounding your pool gets hammered by sun, chlorine splash, and foot traffic—especially when the neighborhood kids show up. Artificial turf changes the game. It stays cool underfoot (no more burned feet running from the deep end), it won't stain from chlorine or algae bloom, and it drains faster than natural grass when water spills over. Most Duluth pools sit in yards that see a mix of afternoon shade from mature oaks and intense midday sun. Turf handles both without turning brown or patchy. We've installed pool edges for homeowners across Gwinnett County, and the feedback is always the same: it looks cleaner, feels safer, and cuts out the maintenance headache that comes with keeping natural grass alive next to chlorinated water. Your pool deserves a deck surface that won't fade, won't harbor mold in humid Georgia summers, and won't need reseeding every other year.
Duluth's established neighborhoods—especially around Sugarloaf and the Parsons corridor—sit on Gwinnett red clay, which drains poorly in its natural state. That matters for pool deck turf because water pooling underneath natural grass leads to root rot and mold. Artificial turf solves this: proper base preparation (which we handle) creates a gravel or recycled asphalt layer that channels water away from your pool structure and into your yard's drainage system. Sun exposure varies across Duluth properties. North-facing pools get afternoon shade; south-facing ones bake all day. Artificial turf performs identically in both conditions—no shade-fade, no sun bleaching issues that plague natural grass. Many Gwinnett County HOAs have specific landscape rules, and we work within those guidelines. Yard sizes in established Duluth neighborhoods tend to be moderate, which means your pool deck turf doesn't require massive rolls or complex seaming. Installation typically takes one to two days, and we remove old sod or concrete debris as part of the project. The red clay base means we'll often recommend a thicker recycled asphalt foundation to prevent settling over time.
Yes. Unlike natural grass, synthetic turf fibers don't absorb chlorine or develop algae stains. Saltwater pools are common around Duluth, and turf handles both chlorine and salt equally well. Any splatter rinses away with a hose or your pool's overflow. The color stays consistent year-round, and you won't see the yellowing or bleaching that affects natural grass near treated water.
We assess your specific lot during the site visit. Duluth's red clay requires a solid base layer—usually recycled asphalt or engineered gravel—to handle Georgia's summer thunderstorms and pool runoff. Once that's in place, water drains away from your pool deck and foundation rather than pooling. Most established Duluth properties drain well once you have the right subsurface setup.
Absolutely. We work around an active pool. The turf installation happens on the deck perimeter, and we're careful to keep debris out of the water. Most Duluth pool deck projects don't require draining. We'll protect the pool edge and work efficiently so your family can get back in the water quickly.
Much less than natural grass. Occasional rinsing (especially after heavy pollen seasons common in Gwinnett County) keeps it fresh. No mowing, no fertilizer, no fungicide sprays for mold—humidity won't kill artificial turf the way it stresses natural grass in Duluth's climate. A yearly power wash keeps it looking new.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.