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Your artificial turf in Dunwoody has been through the seasons—maybe it's seen better days after a few Georgia summers, or you've noticed worn patches near the deck. Here's the thing: good turf repair doesn't have to be complicated or expensive. We've worked on yards all across Georgetown, Winters Chapel, and Dunwoody Village, and we know exactly what happens when synthetic grass starts breaking down in our climate. Whether you're near Brook Run Park or closer to the Perimeter Mall area, those suburban lots take a beating. Kids playing, dogs running, the occasional Georgia downpour pooling in low spots—it all adds up. The good news is that most damage is totally fixable. We're talking seam repairs, infill replacement, drainage fixes, or patching sections that have worn thin. You don't need to rip out your whole lawn and start over. We can get out there, assess what's really going on, and give you honest options that won't drain your budget.
Dunwoody's got some quirks that affect artificial turf performance. Most residential lots sit on that heavy DeKalb clay base, which means drainage becomes critical—standing water after rain is real, and it can undermine your turf's foundation if the base wasn't installed right the first time. Shade is another big factor. Between mature oak and pine trees in Georgetown and the denser canopy in Winters Chapel, a lot of yards don't get full sun. While artificial turf doesn't need sunlight to stay green, poor drainage in shaded areas can trap moisture underneath, speeding up wear and promoting odor issues. HOA communities here—especially in Dunwoody Village—sometimes have specific rules about turf color and pile height, so repairs need to match those standards. Your lot size probably ranges from quarter-acre to half-acre, which means we're usually looking at 2,000 to 4,000 square feet of coverage. That scale makes targeted repairs way more cost-effective than full replacements. If your turf was installed without proper base grading or with inadequate subsurface drainage, we'll address those during repair to prevent the same problems recurring.
Heavy clay soil and inconsistent drainage are the main culprits here. When water pools under your turf, it breaks down the infill and backing. Add Georgia's humidity and intense summer heat, plus foot traffic on suburban yards, and seams start separating, pile gets matted, and infill shifts. Trees in Winters Chapel and Georgetown create damp, shaded spots where these problems compound faster than in sunnier yards.
Partial repair is usually your best move. If you've got a worn patch near the patio or a seam separation, we cut out the damaged section and seam in new turf. For smaller Dunwoody lots, this is way cheaper than full replacement. We can match pile height and color to your existing turf so the repair blends in. Larger damage—like drainage failure affecting a quarter of your yard—might justify a bigger intervention, but we'll tell you straight.
If damage is isolated—a few seams coming loose, infill washing out in one spot, small matted areas—repair works great. If your whole yard drains poorly, the backing is separating in multiple places, or the pile is severely thinned across most of the lawn, replacement makes more sense. We'll walk your Dunwoody yard and give you a real assessment, not a sales pitch.
If we're patching a small area, there might be a slight color or texture difference at first, especially if your original turf has faded from sun exposure. New turf is brighter. Over a few months of weather exposure, the new section blends in. For seam repairs, the seam itself becomes nearly invisible once infill is worked in. Larger repairs in Georgetown or Winters Chapel yards might be more noticeable initially, but they'll meld with time.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.