Turf Weight — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
A putting green in your Loganville backyard isn't just a luxury—it's a way to reclaim your weekends without driving 30 minutes to the nearest course. We work with homeowners all across Walton County, from Downtown Loganville to the Bay Creek area, and we've learned that clay-heavy soil and Georgia's humidity create specific challenges that generic turf installers miss. Your yard might sit in afternoon shade from mature oaks, or bake in full sun depending on whether you're closer to Vines Park or further east. That matters. A putting green that looks great in spring can turn spongy or patchy by summer if the base isn't right for *your* lot. We handle the foundation work most contractors skip—proper drainage, soil amendment, and weight distribution—so your green plays consistent year-round. Whether you've got 200 square feet or 500, we'll design something that fits your space, your sight lines, and the way water actually moves through Loganville clay.
Loganville sits on that Walton-Gwinnett border, which means most yards here have clay-based soil that holds water longer than sandy areas north of Atlanta. That's actually good news for putting green stability—your base won't shift or settle unevenly—but it means drainage is everything. We always install a perforated base layer and slope toward a catch area, especially in the Bay Creek neighborhoods where drainage can be sluggish after heavy rain. Sun exposure varies wildly depending on your lot. Homes near Vines Park and in the tree-lined sections of Downtown Loganville often have dappled afternoon shade, which keeps synthetic turf cooler but can trap moisture. Full-sun properties heat up faster, which actually helps drainage but requires a slightly different infill strategy. Most Loganville lots range from quarter-acre to half-acre, so we're designing greens that feel proportional—not cramped, not overwhelming. HOA rules vary by neighborhood; we always check with your covenant before breaking ground. One more thing: clay soil compacts differently than sandy loam, so our installation crew adds extra attention to base leveling and base weight to prevent settling over the first few seasons.
Absolutely. Our clay-heavy Walton County soil doesn't drain naturally like sandy loam does, so we always install a perforated base and slope the green toward a drainage channel. We also tamp and compact more carefully—clay shifts and settles differently than other soils. The upside: your green won't develop ruts or divots as easily because the base is stable. We've installed over a dozen greens in the Bay Creek area alone, and proper base prep is what separates greens that hold up from ones that get wonky.
Shade slows evaporation and can trap moisture in the turf pile, but it also keeps your green cooler and more comfortable to use in summer. We adjust infill type and pile density for shaded greens—slightly coarser sand, lower infill weight—so water doesn't pool. Downtown Loganville's mature tree coverage is actually nice for putting green longevity. Full-sun greens near Vines Park need different maintenance, but both play great with the right setup.
Size and complexity drive the price. A 300-square-foot green with moderate slope runs between $3,500 and $5,500 installed; larger greens or those with bunkers and multiple elevation changes run higher. Clay soil prep in Loganville adds slightly to labor cost compared to sandier areas, but we factor that into our quotes. We're 40 minutes away, so we bundle Loganville jobs when possible to keep travel costs reasonable.
Spring and fall are low-maintenance seasons here. Summer humidity means you'll brush and blow debris more often to prevent mold. Winter rarely freezes hard enough to damage synthetic turf, but we recommend clearing standing water after heavy rain since clay drainage is slower. Most homeowners spend 15 minutes a week on upkeep: brush pile, remove leaves, check drainage. That's it.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.