Garden Pathway — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Your dog's been tearing up the backyard, and honestly, you're tired of the mud. Around Lawrenceville—whether you're in the historic courthouse neighborhoods or over in Collins Hill—pet owners are discovering that artificial turf solves what Georgia's red clay never could. The stuff grows back thicker every time Fido runs through it, and it doesn't turn into a swamp after a good rain. What we've found working with homeowners across Gwinnett County is that pets actually prefer it. There's no sharp edges, no chemical treatments soaking into their paws, and you're not spending your weekends reseeding dead patches. We install pet-friendly turf that handles the abuse—the digging, the bathroom breaks, the full-sprint zoomies—without breaking down or smelling like a kennel. Most yards around here are older, established lots with mature trees and that heavy red clay underneath. Pet turf works beautifully in those conditions because you're not fighting nature anymore; you're replacing the part that never worked anyway.
Lawrenceville's Gwinnett red clay is dense, which means natural grass either pools water or dries out rock-hard depending on the season. Pet turf eliminates that problem entirely—no more muddy paw prints tracked through the house after rain, no dust clouds during dry spells. The neighborhoods around the historic courthouse and Collins Hill tend to have mature oak and pine coverage, which creates shade patterns that make grass maintenance even tougher. Artificial turf doesn't care about dappled sunlight or full-day shade; it stays green either way. Most properties in this area are well-established with decent-sized yards, which gives us room to work with proper drainage underneath—critical in Georgia's climate where summer storms dump water fast. We'll assess your lot's existing grading and any low spots during the site visit; older homes sometimes have settling issues that direct water toward the foundation, and we'll route the turf's sub-base to work with your landscape, not against it. HOA communities in Gwinnett often have specific landscape codes, so we check restrictions early and make sure your pet turf installation meets those guidelines. The whole process respects what's already there while solving the real problem: a yard that your pets can actually use year-round without destroying itself.
Absolutely. Unlike natural grass, pet turf doesn't need sunlight to stay green and functional. If you've got mature oaks or pines creating shade—common in Collins Hill and the historic neighborhoods—that's actually an advantage. Shade won't cause bare patches, and your dog gets a cooler surface to lie on during hot Gwinnett summers. We design drainage to handle whatever sun exposure you have.
We install a permeable base layer system that works with your yard's existing grading and clay composition. Water drains through the turf and base, preventing the pooling or mud that red clay creates with natural grass. We evaluate your lot during installation to ensure water routes away from your home's foundation, which matters on Gwinnett's older established properties.
Most Gwinnett HOAs approve pet turf because it looks maintained and polished—better than patchy, muddy natural grass. We check your community's specific guidelines upfront and work within them. In fact, many homeowners find pet turf easier to keep HOA-compliant since it never goes dormant or develops dead zones from pet traffic.
Most residential yards take 2-4 days, depending on size and site conditions. We remove old turf, grade the red clay base, install drainage and padding, and lay the pet turf. We'll give you a clear timeline during the estimate so you know when your dog can use the yard again—usually within a week.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.