Before After — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Sport courts in Loganville have come a long way. A decade ago, most homeowners in the Downtown and Bay Creek neighborhoods were stuck choosing between cracked concrete that bakes in the Georgia sun or dirt patches that turn into mud holes after rain. Artificial turf sport courts have changed that conversation entirely. We've installed dozens of these throughout Walton County, and the transformation is honestly something we see families actually use—not just admire from the porch. Your kids get a safe, playable surface year-round. No more replaying that argument about "the yard's too wet" or "it's 95 degrees." Courts near Vines Park and Bay Creek Park show what's possible when you stop fighting the Georgia climate and work with it instead. The before-and-after photos from properties on both sides of the Walton/Gwinnett border tell the real story: a dead or dying grass yard becomes a functional athletic space that handles our clay soil, humidity, and heavy summer use without falling apart.
Loganville's location on that Walton/Gwinnett clay border matters more than you'd think for sport-court installation. That dense clay drains slowly, especially through the Bay Creek area where water tends to pool. We've learned to account for that during base preparation—proper sub-base grading isn't optional here; it's how your court stays playable after a July thunderstorm. Sun exposure varies dramatically depending on whether your property backs toward Downtown or sits deeper in the Bay Creek neighborhoods. South-facing courts absorb more heat, which affects turf performance and comfort during peak afternoon use. Shade from mature oaks (common in established Loganville lots) actually helps extend turf life by reducing UV stress, though it can slow drainage. Most residential yards we work on range from 30×60 to 40×80 feet—enough for basketball, pickle ball, or tennis variations. HOA rules in some Bay Creek developments require approval for court perimeter fencing or color choices, so we always recommend checking covenants first. Installation typically takes 5–7 days depending on existing grade and whether you need substantial base work to handle our clay.
Yes, but only if we build it right. We dig deeper here than in sandier areas, install a perforated base layer, and slope toward drain lines. The clay means we can't just lay turf on compacted dirt and hope. We've done this enough times in the Walton County area to know exactly what works. Water drains through the turf into the gravel base and away from the court. Summer rains won't pool if the foundation is sound.
With proper maintenance, 8–12 years in our climate. Loganville's humidity and temperature swings (hot days, cool nights) are actually less brutal than metro Atlanta further south. UV protection in modern turf fibers handles our sun well. We recommend occasional rinsing to remove pollen and regular brushing to maintain pile height. Most courts we installed 5+ years ago in the Bay Creek area are still performing strong.
Depends on your lot and whether it's an attached or standalone structure. Most residential sport courts don't trigger zoning or building permits in Loganville proper, but check with Walton County if your property is closer to the county line. If you're in a Bay Creek HOA community, you'll definitely need architectural approval. We handle the coordination—it's part of our process.
Grass in Loganville costs money constantly—mowing, fertilizing, fungicide (humidity breeds issues here), watering restrictions in summer, and resodding dead patches. Artificial turf has a higher upfront cost but zero watering, mowing, or chemical treatments. Over five years, most homeowners break even or come out ahead, especially if their yard gets heavy use. Plus, the court stays usable year-round instead of being a mud pit in spring.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.