Next Week Install — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Lawrenceville yards sit on some of Georgia's trickiest terrain. That red clay you've got in Gwinnett County? It holds water like a bathtub. We've seen it happen a hundred times—homeowners around the historic courthouse area and Collins Hill install sod, and within a season, they're dealing with soggy spots, dead patches, and grass that looks like it's drowning. Artificial turf solves that problem, but only if the drainage underneath is done right. Most installers skip this step or half-ass it, which is exactly how you end up with a $15,000 investment that pools water after every rain. That's not happening on our watch. We've spent years learning how Lawrenceville's soil behaves, how water moves through these older established lots, and what it actually takes to build a foundation that keeps your turf dry year-round. Whether you're in 30043, 30044, 30045, or 30046, we know your yard's personality before we even show up. We're talking proper grading, the right base materials, and a drainage system that works with your lot instead of against it. Next week, you could have a turf install that lasts.
Gwinnett red clay is beautiful until water gets involved. It compacts hard, drains slow, and if your yard slopes toward the house or a neighbor's fence line, you're fighting gravity and soil composition at the same time. Most of the lots around Lawrenceville—especially the established neighborhoods near the courthouse—were graded decades ago, which means the drainage patterns are already set in stone (sometimes literally). That works for us. We assess exactly where water wants to go, then design a drainage layer that cooperates with those natural patterns instead of fighting them. The Collins Hill area tends to have slightly better slope than some central Lawrenceville properties, but every yard is different. Sun exposure varies too. Some properties get hammered by afternoon heat, others are shaded by mature trees. Both conditions need different turf selections and base preparation. We also pay attention to HOA landscape requirements in this area—some communities have specific rules about what you can and can't install. We'll make sure your new turf checks every box before we ever break ground. Older lots sometimes have buried debris or irregular grading, so we always do a full walkthrough and explain what we're working with. No surprises at install time.
Gwinnett's red clay doesn't let water percolate quickly. It also compacts over time, especially in older established neighborhoods. Even slight low spots become mini-swamps. Artificial turf with proper drainage layers fixes this—water moves through the turf, through the base, and away from your yard instead of pooling on top. We've done dozens of Lawrenceville yards that went from swamp to usable within days of install.
Yes. We check HOA guidelines for every Lawrenceville neighborhood before we start. Some communities have specific color or pile-height requirements, and we respect that. We'll walk you through any restrictions before you commit. Most HOAs in the historic courthouse area and Collins Hill approve artificial turf when it's done professionally and looks natural.
We haul it away. Some Lawrenceville homeowners ask if they can keep it to replant elsewhere—sometimes that works if it's decent sod, but Gwinnett clay and poor drainage usually mean the grass is already stressed. We'll be honest about what we're pulling up and what makes sense to save.
Most Lawrenceville residential yards—even with full drainage prep—install in one or two days. Larger properties or complex grading might take longer, but we'll give you an honest timeline during the walkthrough. We're reliable about showing up when we say we will.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.