Low Interest — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
East Cobb homeowners have always taken pride in their yards—especially those established properties in Indian Hills, the Lassiter area, and Pope where lot sizes run generous and landscaping is part of the neighborhood character. A putting green isn't just a novelty; it's a natural extension of that investment. Here's the thing: maintaining a traditional lawn in Cobb County's clay-heavy soil is constant work. Between the seasonal battles with compaction, drainage headaches, and the sheer time commitment, plenty of folks in your neighborhood are discovering that a quality artificial putting green lets you actually enjoy your backyard instead of fighting it every weekend. We've installed these throughout East Cobb—from compact practice greens tucked beside three-car garages to full 1,500-square-foot layouts that become the gathering spot for neighborhood cookouts. The upscale lots in these neighborhoods deserve turf that performs year-round without the maintenance cycle, and that's exactly what we build. We're just 15 minutes away, so we know your soil, your drainage patterns, and the exact microclimate quirks of your specific address.
Cobb County clay is beautiful to look at but brutal to manage for golf turf. It holds water in ways that would make a traditional green suffer come spring—poor drainage, compaction, and moss issues are real headaches here. That's actually one of the best reasons a putting green makes sense for East Cobb properties. We design our installations with a perforated base layer that handles our regional rainfall patterns, keeping water moving through instead of pooling. Sun exposure varies wildly depending on whether you're in the tree-lined sections of Indian Hills versus the more open layouts near Pope. We assess your specific lot during the site visit to determine green orientation and any shade mitigation needed. Most East Cobb properties we work with have the lot size to accommodate a green without feeling cramped—unlike tighter subdivisions, you've got room to place it where it actually gets used. HOA guidelines in established neighborhoods like these occasionally require shade cloth during peak summer months, but that's community-specific and we'll flag it during planning. Installation-wise, Cobb's clay means we're doing proper grading and base prep; it's not complicated, just non-negotiable for longevity.
Absolutely. Clay drainage is exactly why we install engineered base layers beneath every green we build in East Cobb. The system directs water downward and laterally away from the playing surface, preventing the waterlogging you'd see with a traditional lawn. We've got years of performance data from Pope, Lassiter, and Indian Hills installations proving it holds up through our wettest seasons.
Most residential putting greens in your area don't require permits since they're considered landscaping improvements, not structures. That said, some HOAs in Indian Hills and similar communities have approval processes. We handle those conversations and paperwork as part of our site assessment, so no surprises later.
Significantly less than you'd think. Light brushing monthly, occasional debris cleanup, and that's mostly it. No mowing, fertilizing, or fighting Cobb's clay compaction issues. Many East Cobb homeowners spend maybe an hour per season on upkeep versus the weekly commitment a real green demands.
We see everything from 400-square-foot practice greens to full 1,500-square-foot layouts. Your lot size and intended use drive it. Neighborhood lots in Pope and Lassiter typically support 800–1,200 square feet comfortably without feeling oversized, giving you two or three holes worth of real practice.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.