Sub Base Types — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Pool season in Flowery Branch means making the most of those warm months around Lake Lanier and the newer developments spreading through Hall County. If you've got a pool deck that's been giving you grief—slippery when wet, hot underfoot, or just plain ugly—artificial turf around the pool area changes everything. It looks like real grass, feels natural when you walk on it barefoot, and doesn't turn into a mud pit after a quick rain like our Hall County clay tends to do. The neighborhoods around Sterling on the Lake and other lakeside communities deal with a lot of moisture and shade from mature trees, which makes natural grass frustrating. Artificial turf doesn't care. It stays green year-round, drains properly so you're not standing in puddles, and holds up to chlorine splash, foot traffic, and the humidity we get here without breaking down. We've been installing pool turf across the area for years, and we know exactly what works in Flowery Branch's climate and soil conditions. Unlike some big box companies, we're local enough to understand your yard, your HOA rules if you've got them, and what actually performs in this part of Georgia.
Hall County's heavy clay soil near the lake creates unique drainage challenges, especially around pool areas where water accumulates fast. That's why artificial turf shines here—it sits on a sub-base system that handles moisture the way natural grass simply can't. The neighborhoods around Sterling on the Lake and newer developments in the area tend to have varying sun exposure depending on tree coverage and lot orientation. Some yards get afternoon shade from mature pines, while others bake in direct sun. Our turf selections account for both. One thing we see constantly in Flowery Branch is HOA regulations around pool landscaping—many communities have specific rules about decking materials and yard appearance. Artificial turf almost always complies because it looks manicured, never patchy, and requires zero chemicals or fertilizers that might violate community guidelines. Pool deck sizing varies here too. Some properties are compact, tucked into Sterling on the Lake's tighter lots, while others have more room to work with. We customize the sub-base depth and drainage approach based on your specific yard size, existing clay conditions, and how much water runoff your pool generates. The key in this area is getting the foundation right so you're not dealing with settling or soggy spots two years down the road.
Absolutely. Our turf is chlorine-resistant and UV-stabilized to hold up to Hall County's humidity and sun. Chlorine splash and occasional chemical exposure won't fade or degrade the material. The real advantage is drainage—our sub-base system moves water away from the turf itself, so chemicals don't pool and concentrate. Just rinse occasionally with a hose and you're golden.
We excavate to proper depth, remove problematic clay, and install a engineered sub-base with gravel and crushed stone layers. This handles Hall County's clay and the moisture that comes with proximity to Lake Lanier. We slope it for drainage so water moves away from your pool deck, not toward it. It's the difference between turf that stays firm and turf that gets squishy.
Most do. Artificial turf looks maintained and professional, which HOAs love. We've installed extensively in Flowery Branch communities and know the typical restrictions. We'll help you verify with your HOA before we start, and our turf meets aesthetic standards virtually everywhere in the area. It's not like bare rubber mulch—it actually looks better than patchy natural grass.
Depends on size and existing conditions. Small to medium pool decks typically take 3–5 days once we've prepared the sub-base. Hall County clay can slow prep if there's significant excavation, but we factor that in upfront. We're based close enough to manage it efficiently without the overhead of traveling from hours away.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.