Holiday Ready — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
The holidays are coming, and if you're in Johns Creek, you're probably thinking about how to make your backyard the place where everyone wants to be. A sport court isn't just a nice-to-have anymore—it's the centerpiece that turns a good home into the one the neighborhood kids actually want to visit. Whether you're in Country Club of the South, St Ives, or anywhere else in the 30005, 30022, 30024, or 30097 zip codes, we've installed enough courts in your area to know exactly what works. The upscale subdivisions around Johns Creek tend to have generous lots, and that's perfect for a professional-grade sport court. Families here care about quality, durability, and aesthetics—and honestly, that's exactly what modern artificial turf delivers. We're based just 35 minutes away, so we're not some distant contractor showing up with one-size-fits-all advice. We've seen how the clay soil, the tree coverage patterns, and the way properties slope in this area affect court performance. A well-built sport court handles Georgia weather, looks sharp year-round, and gives your family something they'll actually use every single day. Let's talk about making that happen before the season really kicks off.
Johns Creek sits on Fulton and Gwinnett clay, which is dense and holds moisture longer than sandy soils. That's actually good news for sport court installation—it means your base stays stable and doesn't shift seasonally the way lighter soils do. The trade-off is drainage. We design courts here with proper slope and perimeter drainage so water doesn't pool, especially during our typical Georgia rainy spells. Sun exposure varies a lot depending on whether you're nestled in the tree-heavy areas around Autrey Mill or in the more open sections near Newtown Park. We assess your specific lot's shade patterns because turf performance and longevity depend on getting that right. HOA landscape rules in Country Club of the South and St Ives tend to be thoughtful about residential improvements, and sport courts typically fit well within those guidelines—just something to confirm early. Most properties in these subdivisions have the square footage to work with, whether you're thinking 30×60 or something more compact. Installation timeline matters this time of year. Cold nights in December don't slow us down, but we do schedule intelligently so the base sets properly and you're ready to use your court as soon as weather permits in early spring.
Yes, it shapes everything. Fulton and Gwinnett clay is dense, which gives us a solid foundation—no worrying about settling. But we engineer drainage carefully because clay holds water. We slope the court properly and install perimeter drain systems so standing water isn't an issue during Georgia's wet months. The clay actually works in your favor once it's engineered correctly.
Almost certainly, yes. These communities are homeowner-friendly about quality improvements that enhance property value and family use. Sport courts fit that profile. We recommend checking your specific HOA guidelines and sometimes submitting a visual mockup, but we've never hit a real roadblock in Johns Creek neighborhoods. It's a straightforward conversation.
A standard court takes 5–7 business days from site prep to completion. December scheduling is tight, but we can absolutely work with you. Cold Georgia nights don't interfere with installation—in fact, they're sometimes ideal. If you want it ready for family gatherings in late December, let's talk timing now.
Sport courts are engineered for performance: proper cushioning, consistent surface texture, and all-weather durability. A resurfaced driveway won't give you that or handle the wear from basketball, tennis, or pickle ball. Sport courts are built specifically for the activity, the climate, and your soil conditions—it's a different animal entirely.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.