Holiday Ready — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
A putting green in your Lawrenceville backyard changes everything about how you spend your downtime—especially as the holidays roll around and you want a reason to stay close to home. Whether you're in the Gwinnett Historic Courthouse area or over toward Collins Hill, we've installed plenty of greens for homeowners who got tired of waiting for a tee time or wanted to entertain guests without leaving their property. Here's the thing about Lawrenceville yards: they're often older, well-established lots with mature trees and that distinctive Gwinnett red clay underneath. That's actually perfect for a putting surface. The clay gives you excellent drainage and a stable base—no guesswork about settling or shifting. We've worked in these neighborhoods long enough to know exactly what works and what doesn't. A synthetic putting green handles our Georgia heat and humidity without the constant maintenance nightmare of real grass, which means come December, you're not spending weekends with a mower. You're sinking putts and making memories with family.
Gwinnett County's red clay is honestly one of the best foundations we work with for artificial putting greens. It's dense, compacts well, and drains predictably—so we're not fighting surprise wet spots or soggy patches after rain. That said, your lot's age matters. Many Lawrenceville homes have established trees, which means dappled shade or full shade in certain areas. We factor that into green placement and orientation. The older neighborhoods around the Historic Courthouse often have tighter lot lines, so we're usually working with defined spaces rather than sprawling acreage. That's fine—some of our best greens are 400–600 square feet, tucked into a corner or running along a back fence line. Sun exposure varies wildly depending on tree canopy and neighboring properties, but our design consultation covers all that. One more thing: check with your HOA (Gwinnett neighborhoods vary on requirements). Most have no issue with a high-quality synthetic green since it looks polished and well-maintained year-round. We handle permitting conversations regularly and can walk you through what the rules actually say versus what neighbors assume they say. The red clay subgrade means minimal excavation in most cases—another win for installation speed and cost.
Gwinnett County generally doesn't require a permit for synthetic putting greens under 1,000 square feet, but we always confirm specifics for your ZIP code (30043, 30044, 30045, or 30046) and check HOA covenants if applicable. We've guided dozens of Lawrenceville homeowners through this—it's straightforward. We'll let you know upfront if anything unusual applies to your property.
Absolutely. Red clay is naturally dense and compacts solidly, which creates excellent drainage without adding extra layers. We prep the clay base, level it, and top it with our subsurface system. You won't have pooling or soggy patches, even after heavy Georgia rain. The clay's stability also means your green stays where you put it—no shifting or settling.
Yes. Synthetic turf doesn't need sunlight to stay green or playable, unlike real grass. If your Collins Hill or Historic Courthouse lot has mature oaks overhead, that's actually ideal—cooler temperatures mean the turf stays more comfortable underfoot in summer. We'll position the green in the shadiest area if that works for your layout.
Most residential putting greens take 2–4 days, depending on size and site prep. Since Gwinnett red clay is predictable and stable, we rarely hit surprises. We'll give you a firm timeline during the consultation and stick to it. Holiday timeline? Let's talk soon—we book up faster in November and December.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.