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Sport courts in Dunwoody aren't just a luxury—they're a practical answer to what a lot of homeowners run into here. Between the shade from mature trees in Georgetown and Winters Chapel, plus that DeKalb clay that stays damp half the year, getting a natural grass court to perform consistently is an uphill battle. A synthetic sport surface changes that equation entirely. You get a playable court for basketball, tennis, or pickle ball that doesn't turn into a mud pit after rain, doesn't require constant reseeding, and actually handles the humid Georgia summers without turning brown. We've installed these across all three ZIP codes—30338, 30346, and 30360—and the homeowners consistently tell us it's one of the best investments they've made. Whether your lot is nestled near Brook Run Park or backing onto one of the quieter streets in Dunwoody Village, a sport court built with the right materials and base preparation will outperform natural turf by years. The proximity to Perimeter Mall and the overall suburban setup here means most Dunwoody lots are spacious enough for a real court footprint, not some cramped corner installation. That's where the real value shows up.
Dunwoody's soil presents its own challenge. That DeKalb clay drains poorly—especially in the lower-lying areas near Georgetown—which means standing water is a genuine problem for grass courts. Even with grading, you're fighting against the soil's natural tendency to hold moisture. Shade is another variable. Lots in Winters Chapel and throughout the area are heavily treed, which cuts UV exposure and keeps the ground damp longer. Synthetic turf thrives in these conditions because it doesn't depend on sunlight for health and drains independently of soil composition. We design the base to account for Dunwoody's clay layer, installing proper sub-base materials and ensuring slope away from structures. Most residential lots here run 0.25 to 0.5 acres, which gives us enough room for a full-size court without cramping your landscape. One thing to verify early: some HOAs in Dunwoody Village have specific guidelines on court colors and perimeter fencing. It's not a deal-breaker, but knowing the rules upfront saves time during permitting. The humid summers mean the court surface itself needs quality UV protection and antimicrobial infill—we don't cut corners there because the moisture load is real.
Yes—actually better than grass would. Shade is one of synthetic turf's advantages. Your court won't brown out, won't develop bare patches from poor light, and the moisture that collects under tree cover won't rot the surface like it would natural grass. We design drainage to handle Dunwoody's clay soil and afternoon moisture.
DeKalb clay is dense and holds water. We account for this by installing a properly graded sub-base with crushed stone and ensuring the court slopes away from your home. Without proper base work, water pools. Our process is built specifically for DeKalb County soil conditions across all three Dunwoody ZIP codes.
Some Dunwoody Village communities have guidelines on court colors, fence height, and setback distances. We recommend checking your HOA docs before we design the layout, but these restrictions rarely kill a project—they just shape the final design. We've navigated this dozens of times in the area.
Most residential sport courts take 2–3 weeks from site prep through final infill and line marking, depending on weather and base conditions. Georgia humidity means we sometimes adjust scheduling to avoid heavy rain windows. We're based about 28 minutes away, so logistics are straightforward.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.