Fixer Upper — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Your artificial turf in Fayetteville has taken a beating. Maybe it's a worn patch near the back door, seams that are starting to separate, or drainage issues that turn your yard into a swamp after heavy Fayette County rain. Whatever the damage, you don't need a full replacement—you need a repair that actually sticks. Here's the thing about turf repair: done wrong, it looks like a band-aid. Seams don't match, the new section sits higher than the old, or water pools in weird spots. That's not happening on our watch. We've been fixing yards across Fayetteville—from the family lots in Whitewater to the bigger properties in Kenwood—and we know exactly how to blend a repair so it vanishes into the rest of your lawn. The Fayetteville area gets intense sun in summer and deals with that heavy clay soil that drains slower than most Georgia counties. That matters for repairs. If your turf is failing, it's usually not because the material is garbage—it's because the base wasn't right, the seams weren't sealed tight, or drainage got overlooked during install. We fix those root causes, not just the symptom.
Fayette County clay is no joke. It holds water longer than sandy soil, which means if your turf repair doesn't account for drainage, you're looking at pooling and premature wear in high-traffic areas. That's especially true in the Whitewater neighborhood where lot grading can vary. We always check the base layer and underlying drainage before patching anything. Sun exposure here is intense during summer months, and it varies wildly depending on mature tree coverage—something you see a lot in the Kenwood area properties. If one side of your yard is shaded and the other gets full sun, the turf ages differently. A repair needs to account for that, or the color match won't hold up. Most Fayetteville residential lots are suburban-sized—not too compact, but not sprawling estates either. That means repairs are usually contained and budget-friendly. HOA rules in some Fayetteville subdivisions specify artificial turf standards, so we make sure any patch meets those specs. We also factor in the clay base when sealing seams; that heavy moisture load means extra attention to edge sealant and proper substrate prep.
Seam separation happens when the underlying clay shifts or when sealant wasn't applied correctly during initial install. Fayette County's clay soil expands and contracts with moisture, which stresses seams more than sandy soil does. We re-seal and sometimes re-lay the seam to lock it down properly. It's one of the most common repairs we do in the Fayetteville area.
One section, absolutely. If the damage is isolated—a worn patch, a burn mark, or a small seam issue—we cut out that area and blend in new turf. As long as the surrounding turf is still in decent shape, a repair is your answer. Most Fayetteville homeowners are shocked at how invisible a good repair looks.
Depends on the size and what we find underneath. A small patch might be done in a few hours. Larger repairs or seam work usually take a full day. We schedule around the Fayetteville heat, so early morning or late afternoon repairs are common. We'll give you a solid timeline once we assess the job.
That's the goal, and we nail it most of the time. We use the same turf grade and color as your install if it's still available. Older installations might not have exact matches, but we get damn close. The Fayetteville sun exposure you're dealing with means aging is visible, so sometimes a repair actually looks fresher than the surrounding lawn initially—it mellows out.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.