Women Owned — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Building a sport court in Hoschton is one of those decisions that pays dividends year-round—especially in a rapidly growing community like yours where families are investing in their homes and outdoor spaces. Whether you're in the Traditions neighborhood, out near Reunion, or anywhere else in Jackson County, we've worked with enough Hoschton homeowners to know what works here and what doesn't. The clay soil in this area drains differently than what you'd find an hour south, and the suburban density means your yard layout matters. A well-designed sport court handles Georgia's humidity better than you'd expect, stays playable through our unpredictable spring weather, and honestly? Kids stop asking to go somewhere else for basketball or tennis. We're a women-owned local installer, and we've been helping Jackson County families transform their backyards into genuine recreation spaces—not just installations, but thoughtful builds that match how you actually live. Let's talk about what a sport court could look like on your property.
Jackson County clay is heavy and compacts quickly, which is actually good news for sport-court base preparation—it won't shift under your court the way sandier soil does. What matters more here is drainage during our wet spring months. We size subsurface drainage to handle Hoschton's rainfall patterns, and we set courts with a gentle slope that keeps water moving off the playing surface without creating puddles. Sun exposure varies a lot depending on whether you're nestled in the Traditions area (more mature trees) or closer to newer development near Reunion (open lots). Courts facing west get hot in summer, which we can address with court color choices and positioning. Most Hoschton properties we work with are half-acre to three-quarter-acre, so we typically have room to build a full 30'×60' court or adapt to a smaller 24'×44' layout depending on your setback requirements and HOA rules. Traditions and Reunion both have landscape guidelines worth reviewing before we dig in—nothing that stops a sport court, but knowing those rules upfront saves time. We handle permitting and design within whatever restrictions apply to your neighborhood.
Most sport courts take 5–7 days from base prep through final line painting, assuming weather cooperates. Jackson County clay requires proper grading and compaction, which we build extra time for if the ground is wet. We schedule work strategically to avoid our heaviest rain weeks and finish before you lose outdoor season time.
Traditions and Reunion both have neighborhood guidelines, though sport courts are generally permitted. We recommend checking your CC&Rs and submitting plans if required—we handle that conversation with your HOA and provide renderings so they see exactly what's coming. Most approvals happen within 2–3 weeks.
Lighter colors (grays, tans) reflect more heat than dark blues or reds, which matters during July and August near Jackson County. We typically recommend medium tones that stay cool underfoot while providing good contrast for tennis and basketball lines. We can show you samples in your actual sunlight.
Jackson County clay actually protects your court base from settling and shifting, which is a win. The trade-off is that initial base prep and drainage design are critical—we over-engineer slightly to handle our wet springs. Once installed, courts here age very predictably, often outlasting installations in sandier areas.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.