Driveway Edge — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Drive through Country Club of the South or St Ives, and you'll notice something: the homes here demand driveways that look as intentional as the landscaping. That's where we come in. Your driveway edges are often the first thing visitors see, and when drainage issues creep in—pooling water, erosion, settling concrete—the whole curb appeal starts to slip. We've spent years working with Johns Creek homeowners in Fulton County, and we understand the specific challenges your property faces. The heavy clay soil common to this area doesn't drain like lighter soils do, which means standing water can become a real problem fast. Rather than just patching the symptom, we address the root: proper grading, strategic drainage solutions, and often, artificial turf installation that eliminates the muddy, eroded patches that plague so many driveways here. Whether you're near Autrey Mill or closer to Newtown Park, that upscale aesthetic you've invested in deserves a solution that works with your soil, not against it. Let's talk about what's actually happening at your driveway edge and how to fix it right.
Johns Creek's signature challenge is Fulton County clay—dense, slow-draining, and unforgiving during Georgia's wet months. Your driveway edge bears the brunt of this. Water pools at the concrete line, seeps under pavers, and encourages erosion that leaves gaps and settling. The subdivisions here—especially the larger lots in Country Club of the South and St Ives—often have significant grade changes from front to back, which means drainage has to be thoughtfully engineered. We've also noticed that many homeowners in this area have shade from mature oaks and pines, which compounds moisture retention around driveway perimeters. When artificial turf enters the picture, it becomes part of the solution. Permeable backing allows water to filter through rather than pool at the edge, while the turf itself eliminates the bare, muddy zones that form when natural grass can't compete with concrete runoff. We customize installation specifics based on your lot's slope and your home's orientation—not every Johns Creek driveway is the same, and neither should the solution be.
Fulton County's clay soil compacts and sheds water rather than absorbing it. Your driveway concrete acts as a barrier, funneling runoff directly to the edges. Without proper grading or drainage, that water has nowhere to go, especially on the larger lots common in Country Club of the South and St Ives. We install drainage solutions—sometimes paired with artificial turf—that redirect water safely away from your pavement.
Absolutely. The permeable backing we install lets water drain through instead of pooling at the concrete line. It eliminates the bare, eroded patches that form when water sits, and it removes the mud that tracks onto your driveway. In Johns Creek's clay-heavy soil, this is often more effective than trying to coax natural grass to grow in those tough edge zones.
Many do, especially in upscale communities like Country Club of the South and St Ives. We work with your HOA requirements from the start—selecting turf colors and styles that align with neighborhood standards, and ensuring our installation meets deed restrictions. We've navigated these conversations countless times and know what typically gets approved.
Most jobs complete in one to two days, depending on scope. We handle grading, drainage prep, and turf installation on-site. Since we're based about 35 minutes from Johns Creek, we schedule efficiently to respect your time. Our crews show up ready to work and leave your property clean and finished.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.