Wheelchair Accessible — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Building a sport court in Lawrenceville isn't just about laying down turf—it's about creating something your whole family can actually use, regardless of mobility. We've worked with homeowners across the Gwinnett Historic Courthouse area and Collins Hill neighborhoods, and we've learned that wheelchair accessibility changes everything about how you design and install a court. The red clay soil Gwinnett's known for drains differently than you'd expect, and that matters when you're building a surface that needs to be level, stable, and safe year-round. Whether you're thinking about a basketball half-court, pickle ball setup, or multipurpose play area, we design with everyone in mind—making sure ramps, transitions, and approach angles work seamlessly into your landscape. Our team handles the site assessment, soil prep, and turf selection with accessibility as the foundation, not an afterthought. Lawrenceville's older established lots often come with grading challenges, but that's exactly the kind of detail we solve before a single blade of turf goes down.
Lawrenceville's Gwinnett red clay is beautiful but stubborn. It compacts hard, sheds water in heavy rain, and can create drainage pockets if you don't slope the base correctly. For a wheelchair-accessible court, proper drainage matters even more—standing water and soft spots become real barriers, not minor annoyances. Most properties in Collins Hill and around the courthouse district have mature shade trees, which means dappled sunlight throughout the day. That's ideal for heat management, but it also means less intense UV stress on synthetic turf—we typically recommend a slightly different pile height and density for shadier courts. Lot sizes here tend to be generous but irregular, so we do a careful site survey to maximize court dimensions while respecting setbacks and sight lines. The clay base requires solid compaction and often a gravel sub-base to prevent settling. We also check for underground utilities before breaking ground—Gwinnett County's infrastructure can surprise you if you're not careful. HOA rules in some Lawrenceville neighborhoods require screening or specific colors, so we factor that into the design conversation early.
Absolutely. Red clay compacts dense and sheds water unpredictably, especially on sloped lots. We always add a gravel sub-base and grade carefully to ensure proper drainage away from your home and toward natural drainage points. Wheelchair users especially notice soft spots and settling, so we engineer the base to handle long-term compaction without movement. Testing soil composition is part of our standard assessment in Lawrenceville.
Yes, but it requires intentional design. We create level play surfaces using retaining walls or step-down terracing, then connect them with ramped transitions that meet ADA slope requirements. Your court itself stays flat and stable; the ramps do the grade work. We've done this successfully on several Collins Hill properties and can show you examples of how it looks finished.
Mature trees are common here and honestly beneficial—they reduce heat and UV stress. Dappled shade throughout the day is fine; dense all-day shade under heavy canopy can slow drainage and moss growth in humid seasons. We assess your specific canopy coverage and recommend turf specs accordingly. If you're planning modifications like selective pruning, we can factor that into the design.
Site prep and drainage design take about two weeks of planning after assessment. Actual installation—base prep, turf installation, ramp and transition work—usually takes three to five days depending on court size and complexity. Weather in Gwinnett can delay things in heavy rain, but we schedule around seasonal patterns and make sure everything's ready before we start.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.