New Construction Home — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
New construction homes in Lawrenceville are popping up across Gwinnett County—especially around Collins Hill and near the historic downtown corridor—but here's what builders and new homeowners don't always tell you: that freshly graded lot you're standing on? It's going to shift and settle over the first couple of years. If you've installed natural grass during construction, you're looking at bare patches, washouts, and uneven terrain by year two or three. Artificial turf sidesteps that entire headache. We've worked with dozens of new-build homeowners in the 30043, 30044, and 30045 zip codes who chose synthetic grass during their landscaping phase and never looked back. It handles Gwinnett's red clay foundation without the settling problems, it's ready to use immediately (no waiting for seed germination), and it actually looks better as the property stabilizes underneath. Whether you're in a neighborhood HOA with landscape standards or you just want a yard that looks finished from day one, turf repair and installation on new construction is one of the smartest moves you can make before you move in.
Gwinnett County's notorious red clay poses real challenges for traditional grass. That dense, compacted soil drains poorly and gets slick when wet—exactly what you don't want under fresh sod or seed during those critical first months. Artificial turf eliminates drainage anxiety entirely. New construction lots in Lawrenceville often feature uneven grading that will continue to settle as utilities are finalized and the foundation of your home stabilizes. Synthetic grass doesn't root into that shifting soil, so it won't buckle or create dead zones as the ground moves. Sun exposure varies dramatically here too. Properties near Collins Hill and the Gwinnett County Courthouse area include a mix of established shade trees and wide-open southern exposures. Natural grass struggles in shade; turf doesn't. Installation on new construction is actually easier than retrofit work because the ground hasn't been heavily trafficked yet. We typically recommend completing turf installation after grading is finalized but before the final walkthrough—it protects your soil investment and gives you an instantly usable yard. Most HOAs in Gwinnett County approve artificial turf explicitly, especially for new builds where it's installed during the construction landscape phase.
Yes. Most HOAs in Gwinnett County, including neighborhoods around Collins Hill and the historic downtown area, explicitly permit high-quality artificial turf on new construction homes. It's actually preferred by many associations because it maintains uniform appearance across the community. We recommend reviewing your CC&Rs before installation, but we've rarely encountered a rejection in the 30043–30046 zip codes.
Modern synthetic turf in Lawrenceville stays much cooler than older generations—typically 10–15°F above ambient temperature on peak summer days. In practice, that's comfortable for bare feet. We also offer infill materials designed specifically for heat management in the South. It's genuinely not an issue for most families.
Not yet. We wait until final grading is complete and the property has settled from utility work. This typically happens 30–60 days before closing on new construction. Installing too early means the turf shifts with the soil beneath it. We coordinate with your builder's timeline to get it done right.
Most residential properties in Lawrenceville are installed in 2–4 days, depending on lot size and site conditions. New construction actually installs faster because there's less debris removal and site prep than retrofit jobs. We handle everything from soil remediation through final grooming before you get your keys.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.