Women Owned — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Your artificial turf in Marietta takes a beating. Between the red clay that stains everything, the shade from those mature oaks canopying most East and West Cobb yards, and Georgia's unpredictable weather cycles, synthetic grass develops wear patterns that natural lawns would never survive. We've spent years repairing turf across Marietta's neighborhoods—from the leafy streets near Kennesaw Mountain down to the more open properties around Whitlock—and we know exactly what breaks down and why. Repairs aren't just about patching holes. When your turf starts showing seams, backing deterioration, or drainage issues, it's usually because of something specific to how Marietta's landscape works against synthetic materials. Our team handles everything from small spot repairs to full seam re-gluing and infill redistribution. We're a women-owned shop, and we pride ourselves on honest diagnostics—sometimes a repair makes sense, sometimes a section replacement is smarter. We'll tell you which one applies to your yard, and we'll get it right the first time.
Marietta's turf repair challenges are tied directly to the geography. That signature red clay in Cobb County doesn't drain like most soils, which means water pools under your synthetic grass more than it would elsewhere. Add the heavy oak canopy—especially in the neighborhoods between East Cobb and Whitlock—and you get moisture retention that promotes algae growth and backing degradation. We regularly see turf in these shadier zones develop seam separation faster than yards with afternoon sun exposure. The flip side: properties closer to Marietta Square and the more open West Cobb areas face different stressors. Direct sun ages the blade fibers, UV exposure weakens backing materials, and temperature swings accelerate infill compaction. HOA guidelines in many Marietta subdivisions also dictate specific turf heights and pile densities, so repairs have to match your existing installation specs exactly. Most residential yards here run between 2,000 and 6,000 square feet, which means repairs often focus on high-traffic zones—entryways, pet paths, and play areas—rather than full replacements.
Cobb County's red clay doesn't compact evenly under synthetic turf, and that shifting foundation causes seams to separate. Shade zones near mature oaks trap moisture, which weakens the latex adhesive over time. We reglue and reinforce seams using methods that account for Marietta's clay base and humidity patterns. Most seams need retreatment every 4–6 years depending on drainage and foot traffic.
Yes. Marietta's HOA communities are strict about landscape uniformity, and we maintain detailed specs for every common turf brand and pile weight. Before we touch your repair, we pull samples, measure blade height, and confirm infill type. That way your patch is visually indistinguishable from the surrounding turf.
Depends on the damage extent and your turf age. If you're under 8 years and the damage is isolated to one or two zones, repair is almost always cheaper. If backing is failing across 40% of your yard or the pile has matted completely, replacement makes more sense. We assess honestly—no upsell—and give you both options with real pricing.
East Cobb's shadier, clay-heavy lots see repairs every 5–7 years. West Cobb's sunnier properties sometimes go 8–10 years before significant work is needed, but UV damage accelerates after year 7. Regular infill top-ups and annual raking extend repair intervals for both zones.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.