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A putting green in your Johns Creek backyard isn't just a luxury—it's a practical way to enjoy golf without leaving home. Whether you're in Country Club of the South, St Ives, or anywhere across the 30005, 30022, 30024, and 30097 zip codes, we've installed dozens of synthetic putting surfaces that handle our Georgia heat and humidity without the constant maintenance headaches. Most of our Johns Creek clients tell us the same thing: they wanted their yards to feel more like private clubs, not practice ranges. Real grass putting greens in this area mean fighting clay soil compaction, uneven drainage, and the kind of afternoon sun that turns summer grass dormant. Artificial turf eliminates all of that. You get consistent ball roll, year-round playability, and a surface that looks sharp whether you're hosting friends near Autrey Mill or enjoying a quiet morning at Newtown Park. We're about 35 minutes from most Johns Creek addresses, and we handle everything from initial site prep to final drainage—no financing games, no surprises. Your neighbors likely have us on speed dial already.
Johns Creek's Fulton County clay soil is a real consideration for putting greens. That dense clay base means water sits rather than drains naturally, which wreaks havoc on natural grass putting surfaces and creates muddy conditions after rain. Synthetic turf eliminates the drainage problem entirely when we install it with proper sub-base grading. The neighborhood setups here—especially the larger lots in Country Club of the South and St Ives—typically give us room to work with full-size or near-full-size greens without cramping the yard. Sun exposure varies wildly depending on mature tree canopies. Some properties get brutal afternoon western sun; others are shaded by oaks and pines that've been there for decades. We assess your specific microclimate during the consultation because that shapes which turf pile height and yarn density work best. Many HOAs in Johns Creek have landscape guidelines, so we'll review those with you upfront. The good news: most boards approve synthetic putting greens because they're manicured, low-maintenance, and green year-round. Installation on clay typically takes 2–3 days once we've got the subgrade prepped.
Clay compacts and holds water, which is exactly what you don't want under a putting surface. We excavate, grade for slope, and install a crushed stone base that sits on top of the clay. This creates drainage channels so water moves away from your green rather than pooling. Without it, you'd get soft spots and inconsistent putting surfaces even with synthetic turf.
Most do. Artificial greens fit the aesthetic most upscale Johns Creek neighborhoods want—manicured, green year-round, no bare patches. We'll help you review your specific CC&R guidelines and can provide examples from similar neighborhoods. No approvals issues in our experience so far.
Putting greens have much tighter, shorter yarn (typically 0.5 to 1 inch) that mimics bent grass. Lawn turf is thicker and taller. For accurate putting and consistent ball roll in Johns Creek's humidity, we use premium putting-grade synthetic that won't compact or flatten under regular foot traffic.
Yes, but we remove the old sod first and work from the clay base up. Trying to build on top of existing grass leads to soft spots and settling. A clean excavation and proper subgrade takes longer upfront but gives you a putting surface that stays level and plays true for years.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.