Garden Pathway — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Your artificial turf in Johns Creek takes a beating. Between the clay-heavy soil in Fulton County that shifts with Georgia's humidity swings, the intense summer sun that bears down on the manicured lawns of Country Club of the South and St Ives, and the occasional drainage headache from our unpredictable spring rains, even premium synthetic grass needs attention. We've been repairing turf installations across the 30005, 30022, and 30024 ZIP codes for years, and we know exactly what causes premature wear in this area. Maybe your seams are separating. Maybe UV exposure has created bare patches. Maybe the infill has compacted unevenly because of how our clay base settles. Whatever's happening in your yard—whether it overlooks Autrey Mill or sits in one of the quieter stretches near Newtown Park—repair is almost always faster and smarter than replacement. We handle everything from partial re-turfing to seam reinforcement to infill restoration, and we can usually get your lawn looking restored within a week.
Johns Creek's landscape throws some specific curveballs at artificial turf. The Fulton and Gwinnett clay underneath most yards here doesn't drain like sandy soil—it holds moisture, which means water can pool under your turf if the base wasn't graded correctly during installation. That's one of the first things we check during repairs. Sun exposure is brutal in summer, especially on west-facing lawns in the larger estates scattered throughout Country Club of the South. If your turf was installed five or more years ago, UV degradation shows up as fading and brittleness along the edges first. The infill—sand and rubber crumb that keeps blades upright—tends to compact faster here because of our humidity and foot traffic patterns on those expansive yards. HOA communities like St Ives sometimes have specific requirements about turf pile height and color consistency, so we always confirm expectations before starting work. And because many Johns Creek properties sit on 1–3 acre lots, repairs sometimes make more financial sense than you'd expect when we can target just the problem zones instead of full replacement.
Our Fulton County clay base is the culprit most of the time. Clay compacts and holds water underneath the turf, especially after a few Georgia rain cycles. During repair, we assess the base layer and can add drainage amendments or regrade problem areas. If pooling is recent, it's usually fixable without a complete tearout—we just need to redirect water away from the low spots.
Repair almost always wins on larger properties. If the damage is concentrated—bad seams, a worn section, infill loss in one area—we repair just that zone. On 2–3 acre lots, that saves thousands compared to full replacement. We're only 35 minutes away, so we can scope it quickly and give you honest numbers on whether repair or replacement makes sense.
Every 5–7 years in this climate, depending on foot traffic and sun exposure. Our humidity accelerates infill breakdown. If your turf feels thin or blades aren't bouncing back, infill topping or full replacement is usually the answer. We can refresh just the worn zones or do the whole yard—we'll recommend based on what we see.
Seam separation is one of the easiest repairs we do. We can re-glue, reinforce, and sometimes re-seam without touching the rest of your yard. It's common in Johns Creek because clay-base settling can shift turf slightly over time. Usually a one-day job that restores the whole section.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.