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Your artificial turf in Johns Creek has taken a beating—maybe the UV got to a corner patch, or the infill settled unevenly across your backyard in Country Club of the South. Whatever happened, a full replacement isn't always the answer. We've spent years repairing turf installations throughout Fulton County, and Johns Creek's mix of manicured subdivisions and tricky clay soil means we've seen just about every wear pattern out there. Partial repairs, seam fixes, infill top-ups, and drainage corrections are often faster and smarter than ripping everything out. The good news: if your turf was installed right the first time, repair work is straightforward. If it wasn't, we'll fix the root cause while we're at it. Most Johns Creek homeowners are surprised how much life is left in their investment once we assess what's actually broken. That's why we start every repair conversation with a real look at your yard—not a sales pitch for a new install.
Johns Creek sits on Fulton and Gwinnett clay, which means drainage is something we think about constantly during repairs. Clay doesn't play well with standing water, and if your turf was installed without proper base preparation, settling and soggy patches become the norm—especially around Newtown Park and the St Ives area where yards tend to be larger and grading matters more. The upscale neighborhoods here also mean most HOA covenants care about how your yard looks during repair work. We schedule jobs to minimize disruption and always haul debris same-day. Sun exposure varies wildly depending on whether you're under oak canopies or in open southern-facing yards. We've learned that turf in shadier lots (common near Autrey Mill) wears differently than full-sun installations, so repair strategies differ. Infill migration is real in our clay-heavy soil, especially on slopes. During repairs, we often recommend slightly heavier infill specifications than the original install to account for Johns Creek's drainage challenges and the clay subbase.
Not necessarily. If the base and seams around the damaged area are solid, we can cut out the dead section and seam in a patch. We match the pile height and color as closely as possible. On larger spots or if the underlying base is compromised, replacement of that zone makes sense. We'll tell you honestly which direction saves money without cutting corners.
Our clay soil and seasonal weather patterns here mean most yards lose 5–10% of infill annually. We recommend checking your infill depth every year and doing a top-up every 2–3 years. St Ives and Country Club properties with heavier foot traffic might need it annually. A simple rake-test tells you if you're low.
Yes, and it's one of the most common repairs we do in Johns Creek. Seam lifting happens when infill settles unevenly or if the original tape installation wasn't robust enough for our clay base. We can re-tape, add infill beneath the seam, and reactivate the adhesive. It's a fraction of full replacement cost.
Could be either. If the turf itself is fine but water pools, we might add drainage rock or regrade the base. If the turf is waterlogged and deteriorating, we need to pull it up, improve subsurface drainage, and reinstall. We assess both before quoting—drainage problems are worth solving right the first time.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.