Seam Repair — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Artificial turf is everywhere in Hiram now—from the Cedarcrest area to Bill Arp neighborhoods, businesses are ditching the maintenance headaches and embracing synthetic grass that actually holds up. The thing is, once that turf goes down, seams are the weak point. They separate, they wear, and if water starts sneaking underneath, you've got a real problem on your hands. That's where we come in. We're just 25 minutes away in the LawnLogic service area, and we've fixed enough commercial turf seams in Paulding County to know exactly what Hiram's climate throws at artificial grass. Our clay-heavy soil and the humidity that rolls through here means seams take a beating—especially on high-traffic surfaces like parking areas, loading zones, or recreation fields near Hiram City Park. Whether your turf is two years old or ten, seam failure doesn't have to mean ripping it all out. We patch, we repair, and we make sure water drainage is working the way it should. Let's talk about what you're dealing with.
Hiram sits in Paulding County with that notorious red clay underneath everything. When you install commercial artificial turf here, the base preparation matters more than most contractors admit—that clay doesn't drain like sandy soil, so if your seams start leaking, water pools fast. You'll see this especially in the Cedarcrest neighborhoods where some of the newer commercial properties went in with tight, compacted base layers. Sun exposure is another thing. The Silver Comet Trail side of town gets serious afternoon heat, which can cause synthetic turf to expand and contract unevenly. That expansion stress hits seams hard. We also see a lot of commercial properties with wide-open yards that need multiple seam joints just because of the turf roll widths—more seams means more potential failure points. Shade trees in older business areas mean moisture retention around seams, which accelerates wear. Bill Arp area commercial spaces tend to be flatter, which helps with drainage, but it also means standing water gets worse when seams fail. The other thing: Hiram's growing fast. A lot of business owners installed turf 5–8 years ago thinking it was maintenance-free forever. It's not. Seams need inspection, caulking refresh, and sometimes full repair. Our crews know the soil conditions, the sun patterns, and the humidity swings that make Hiram unique.
Paulding County's dense clay doesn't drain like other soils. When seams develop gaps or the caulk deteriorates, water sits instead of running through. That standing water breaks down the turf backing and the adhesive underneath. We've pulled up commercial turf across Hiram where seam failure was directly tied to poor water escape through the clay base. Proper drainage and regular seam inspection are non-negotiable here.
We recommend a walk-through inspection twice a year—spring and fall—because temperature swings stress seams. After heavy rain, take a look for pooling near seam lines. If you're in the Cedarcrest or Bill Arp areas with older turf, annual professional inspection is smart. Catching separation early keeps costs way down versus waiting until water damage spreads.
Absolutely. If seams are separating or caulk is failing, we can re-caulk, re-glue, or patch localized damage without a full replacement. For high-traffic commercial spaces in Hiram, this saves money and downtime. Full seam rework is only necessary if the backing is compromised or the base has shifted—rare, but it happens with our clay soil if drainage failed early on.
That afternoon sun heats turf to 150+ degrees on dark blades, causing expansion. Seams that were tight in morning cool can gap by afternoon, then contract at night. Over months, this cycling fatigues the seam bond. Commercial turf on the sunny side of Hiram properties needs tighter monitoring. We use UV-stable sealants and recommend shade strategies where possible to reduce thermal stress.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.