Installation — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Hiram's been growing fast, and we've noticed more families in the Cedarcrest and Bill Arp areas asking about sport courts for their backyards. Makes sense—between the clay soil that holds water and the Georgia heat, maintaining a natural grass court here is a real headache. A synthetic sport court changes that equation entirely. You get a consistent playing surface year-round, no mud puddles after rain, and zero fighting with the thick Paulding County clay that loves to compact and crack. We're based just 25 minutes away, so we know this area's specific challenges. Whether your kids play basketball, pickleball, or you just want a reliable surface for training, artificial turf handles Hiram's weather patterns without the constant maintenance. The Silver Comet Trail crowd and families near Hiram City Park have already figured out that a quality sport court pays for itself in time savings and durability. Let's talk about what makes sense for your yard.
Paulding County's clay base is your biggest consideration. That heavy, dense soil doesn't drain like sandy loam, which means water sits around after our typical Georgia downpours. A sport court installation here needs proper base preparation—we're talking crushed stone, compaction, and drainage layers that account for clay's behavior. The good news is that artificial turf solves that problem permanently. Sun exposure varies depending on whether your lot backs up toward trees or sits in the open like many properties in the newer Cedarcrest developments. Full-sun courts need UV-resistant infill materials; shaded spots actually perform better in our summer heat. Most Hiram yards have enough space for a half court or full court setup, though HOA restrictions in some neighborhoods do apply—we always check those first. Hiram's humidity and summer temps can stress natural grass into dormancy, but synthetic sport surfaces handle the heat without stress. Winter's mild enough that your court stays playable basically year-round.
Absolutely. Clay compacts differently than standard soil, and it doesn't drain naturally. We excavate, remove the clay, and replace it with a structured base—crushed stone, geotextile, then compacted layers. This prevents the settling and water pooling that plague natural grass here. It's extra work upfront, but it's the only way to get a court that lasts.
That depends on your specific neighborhood. Many Hiram subdivisions have landscape guidelines, but most allow artificial courts if they're setback from property lines. We review your HOA documents before quoting—no surprises. Some communities even encourage turf for conservation reasons.
Synthetic courts actually thrive here. Heat doesn't stress the material like it stresses natural grass. Humidity is a non-issue for artificial turf. The main thing is choosing infill that won't retain excessive heat—we spec products rated for Georgia climates specifically.
A typical residential court takes 3–5 days on-site, depending on base work needed for that clay soil. We handle all the prep, compaction, and drainage before the turf goes down. Being local means we can schedule efficiently and address any site-specific issues quickly.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.