Sub Base Types — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Hiram's growing neighborhoods—from the Cedarcrest area to Bill Arp—are filled with families who want their yards to work as hard as they do. A sport court isn't just a backyard addition; it's a place where your kids can shoot hoops, play tennis, or practice volleyball without waiting for a travel league. The real challenge in Paulding County isn't finding space—it's dealing with what's underneath. That heavy clay soil creates drainage headaches, keeps puddles around after rain, and makes traditional grass courts a maintenance nightmare. That's where artificial turf comes in. We install sport courts that sit on engineered sub-base systems designed specifically for Georgia's climate and soil. Your court drains properly, stays playable year-round, and doesn't require the weekly mowing and fertilizing that eat up your weekends. Whether you're in a neighborhood near Silver Comet Trail or closer to Hiram City Park, the installation process is the same: we assess your lot, prepare the foundation correctly, and build you a surface that'll handle everything from summer heat to the occasional clay splash. Most families we work with in Hiram see their court as an investment in their home's value and their family's activity level. No more excuses about weather, no more brown patches, no more wasted weekends on yard work.
Paulding County clay is both a blessing and a curse. It's stable for foundation work, which is good for sub-base installation, but it sheds water poorly on its own. That's why proper grading and drainage infrastructure matter so much here. We build our sport courts with a 1–2% slope and use a compacted stone base layer that moves water away from the playing surface—critical during Hiram's spring rains and summer thunderstorms. Sun exposure varies across town; properties near the Cedarcrest area tend to get full afternoon heat, while some lots backing onto wooded sections have more shade. This affects both court performance and durability. We'll walk your property and recommend turf pile heights and infill types that match your specific sun/shade pattern. Most Hiram yards range from quarter-acre to half-acre, which gives families room for a 30×40 court or smaller 20×30 setups without feeling cramped. Some HOAs in Paulding County have landscape guidelines—we're familiar with local restrictions and can help you navigate those before breaking ground. One thing we always mention: the red clay dust that Hiram gets on everything. A properly sealed sub-base prevents that clay from working its way up through the turf over time, keeping your court looking clean and playing true.
Clay compacts unevenly and holds water, which causes the playing surface to settle, crack, and become uneven within months. We use a multi-layer sub-base with crushed stone and proper grading to create a stable, draining foundation. In Paulding County's heavy clay, this foundation work is non-negotiable if you want your court to last.
It's everything. Spring rains and summer storms hit hard here, and standing water ruins artificial turf and causes mold growth. Our sub-base design moves water away from the court surface into adjacent landscape or a dry well, keeping your court playable hours after rain instead of days.
Yes. Modern artificial turf is engineered for Georgia's temperature swings. The infill we use stays stable in summer heat and doesn't become brittle in winter. We've installed dozens of courts across Paulding County, and they perform reliably year-round.
LawnLogic is about 25 minutes away, which means we're local enough to respond quickly to questions, inspect your site without a long drive, and handle follow-up maintenance or repairs efficiently. We know the Hiram neighborhoods and Paulding County conditions firsthand.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.