Rooftop Deck — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
McDonough's rooftop and deck spaces are prime real estate—especially in Eagle's Landing and around Heritage Park where those newer homes have killer backyard potential. But here's the thing: a standard grass deck doesn't work, and most homeowners aren't thinking about the maintenance nightmare of keeping live turf alive on a rooftop in Henry County's summer heat. That's where a putting green changes everything. You get that lush, manicured look without watering, mowing, or dealing with the clay-heavy soil issues that plague so many yards around McDonough Square and Kelleytown. A quality artificial putting green on your deck or rooftop gives you a genuine golf experience right at home—perfect for practicing your short game, impressing neighbors, or just having something beautiful to look at that actually stays green year-round. We've installed dozens of these in the Henry County area, and rooftop greens have become the go-to upgrade for homeowners who want low-maintenance luxury without the constant upkeep.
McDonough's rapid-growth subdivisions mean a lot of newer homes with deck and rooftop potential, but the underlying Henry County clay creates real challenges if you're trying to maintain live grass anywhere nearby. That dense clay drains poorly, compacts easily, and makes traditional turf setups frustrating. On a rooftop or elevated deck, you're already working with exposure—intense afternoon sun, wind exposure, and thermal stress from reflected heat off shingles or composite decking. An artificial putting green sidesteps all of that. The synthetic turf we install handles full-sun rooftop conditions without fading or dying back, and there's zero soil interaction. Installation on decks in Eagle's Landing subdivisions typically involves a base layer system that accounts for water drainage and weight distribution—important because deck joists and rooftop load ratings matter. Many HOAs in the area (particularly newer Eagle's Landing neighborhoods) have strict landscape rules, but rooftop and deck installations usually fall outside those restrictions since they're structural improvements, not yard modifications. The clay soil around your foundation won't matter at all when your putting green is elevated.
Absolutely. Our turf is UV-stabilized and designed for full-sun exposure. McDonough summers are brutal, but synthetic putting green turf doesn't brown out, go dormant, or require shade management like live grass would. The material reflects heat rather than absorbing it, and there's no risk of heat-stress die-off that you'd see with traditional turf in direct afternoon sun.
That's built into the installation. We use a perforated base system that channels water away from your deck structure. Rain drains through the turf and base layers without pooling. On rooftops, proper grading and drainage channels prevent water from sitting or damaging the membrane underneath.
Either works. Composite decks are actually ideal because they're stable and low-maintenance already. We secure the turf system with fasteners rated for composite material. The key is making sure the deck is structurally sound and level—Henry County's humidity and clay soil mean decks can shift over time, so we always inspect before committing to installation.
Minimal. Brush it occasionally to keep the pile standing, clear leaves and debris (especially in fall), and rinse it a couple times a year if pollen buildup is heavy in Henry County. No mowing, no watering, no fertilizer, no fungus issues from the clay soil. It stays playable year-round.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.