Condo Patio — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
East Cobb's established neighborhoods—Indian Hills, the Lassiter area, Pope area—are full of homes where the backyard is an extension of the living space. Your condo patio or compact yard doesn't get a pass on durability or style, though. That's where a sport court makes sense. Whether you're in 30062, 30066, 30067, or 30068, you're looking at upscale lots with clay-heavy Cobb County soil that doesn't drain the way you'd hope, and shade patterns that shift seasonally around mature trees. Natural grass struggles with both. A synthetic sport surface—the kind you'd see at East Cobb Park or a nearby country club—gives you a year-round, low-maintenance court for tennis, pickleball, basketball, or just a flat, clean play area. We're based just 15 minutes away in the same county, so we understand the specific challenges your soil, drainage, and HOA guidelines present. A sport court isn't just functional. It's a genuine upgrade to how your property feels and performs.
Cobb County clay is unforgiving. It stays wet longer than sandy soils, compacts under foot traffic, and erodes unevenly—especially on slopes. If you're installing a sport court on a patio or smaller residential lot in East Cobb, proper base preparation is non-negotiable. We account for the region's spring and fall moisture patterns by building in adequate sub-base drainage, which keeps the playing surface level and safe even after heavy rain. Shade from mature trees (common in Indian Hills and Pope area lots) means moss and algae growth on natural surfaces; synthetic turf handles that with zero chemical intervention. Most East Cobb patios and compact yards fall in the 400–800 sq ft range, which is actually ideal for a sport court—you get genuine performance without overwhelming the space. HOA guidelines in your neighborhood may restrict color or surface type, so we review deed restrictions upfront. The result: a surface that stays playable, doesn't mud up, and integrates cleanly with your home's aesthetic. Sewell Mill Library area residents especially appreciate not having to maintain anything; the court just works.
Not necessarily. If your concrete patio is structurally sound and drains reasonably well, we can often build the sport court base directly over it. Cobb County clay underneath means we're usually working around existing hardscape anyway. We'll inspect for cracks and poor drainage first—if the patio is failing, replacement is cleaner. Most East Cobb homeowners are surprised how little disruption the process actually creates.
Exactly why we recommend it. Cobb County clay doesn't compact evenly, and it holds moisture. A sport court eliminates both issues—no mud, no standing water, no seasonal dead zones. We size the drainage base to handle the area's typical spring rainfall, so your court stays playable year-round. You're not fighting the soil anymore; you're working around it with a proven solution.
Most HOAs permit them, but deed restrictions vary by neighborhood. Indian Hills, Lassiter, and Pope area communities sometimes limit surface color or require architectural review. We handle that conversation with your HOA for you—we've worked with dozens of East Cobb communities and know which approvals are routine versus which need strategy. Typically, earth tones and neutral grays sail through.
10–15 years of heavy use, longer with moderate play. Cobb's UV exposure and seasonal temperature swings do age synthetic surfaces, but modern turf is tougher than it was five years ago. We recommend light power-washing in late summer to remove pollen and algae buildup from shade. Properly maintained, your court stays game-ready for over a decade.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.