Forever Home — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Holly Springs homeowners have figured something out that the rest of Cherokee County is catching up to: a sport court in your backyard changes everything. Maybe you've got kids who want a place to shoot hoops without driving to the Harmony area parks, or you're the type who actually uses your yard year-round instead of letting it turn into a mud pit come spring. That's where we come in. A properly installed sport court handles what Georgia clay does best—staying stubborn and wet—while giving you a surface that's ready to play on the day after rain. We've been installing these across the region long enough to know exactly how the rolling terrain in Holly Springs behaves, which direction the sun hits different backyards in the Town Center vicinity, and why rushing the base prep is how you end up with a court that looks rough by year three. This isn't about selling you something you don't need. It's about understanding that forever homes in Holly Springs deserve outdoor spaces that actually get used, and that means building something durable enough to handle real life.
Holly Springs sits on Cherokee County's characteristic rolling clay—the same stuff that makes spring yard drainage a headache and summer baking predictable. Your backyard's slope matters. We've learned that properties in the Harmony area and closer to Holly Springs Town Center often have decent elevation change, which is honestly good news for a sport court if the base is engineered right. Water needs somewhere to go, and proper grading during installation is non-negotiable here. Sun exposure varies wildly depending on whether your lot backs to mature trees or faces open sky. We map that out before quoting because a court in full sun plays different than one with afternoon shade, especially in July. Most Holly Springs lots have room for a half-court or full-court setup—the newer construction neighborhoods tend toward larger properties, which gives you options. The clay base itself requires a solid crushed stone and asphalt foundation to prevent the shifting and settling that Georgia's wet winters create. Skipping steps on prep work is how courts develop cracks and uneven spots within a couple years. We build these to last through multiple Georgia seasons, which means doing the foundation right the first time.
Most Holly Springs neighborhoods permit them, but you'll want to check your specific covenants—some communities have preferences on color or setback distance. We help homeowners navigate that conversation. The Town Center area and Harmony neighborhoods generally embrace these kinds of upgrades since they add property value. Give us a call and we can walk through what your HOA typically approves.
The rolling clay here is exactly why proper base preparation matters. We excavate, grade for positive drainage away from structures, and lay a compacted stone base topped with asphalt. That prevents water pooling and the shifting that causes cracks. Holly Springs' elevation changes are actually helpful if we slope the court correctly during installation.
Outdoor courts in Holly Springs handle Georgia heat, rain, and UV exposure—that means tougher acrylic or polyurethane surfaces, better drainage systems, and thicker base layers than indoor facilities. We design for year-round durability, including managing how spring moisture and summer heat cycle through the court structure.
Most residential courts take 2-3 weeks from site prep through final surface cure, depending on weather and ground conditions. We're 20 minutes from Holly Springs, so scheduling is straightforward. Georgia spring rains can add time if we need to manage water during the base work, but we build that into timelines.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.