Eco Friendly — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
McDonough's growing families—especially around Eagle's Landing and Kelleytown—are discovering that a sport court isn't just about basketball or tennis anymore. It's a place where your kids actually want to spend time outside, where neighborhood games happen without the "Mom, can we go to the park?" question, and where your property value gets a genuine boost. We've installed dozens of sport courts across Henry County, and we've learned that McDonough homeowners care about durability and sustainability in equal measure. Your yard sits on that heavy Henry County clay, which drains differently than what most national installers expect. That matters. A poorly installed court becomes a puddle farm come summer. An eco-friendly sport court—one built with recycled rubber, permeable drainage systems, and surfaces that reflect less heat than asphalt—actually makes sense in our climate. Heritage Park is beautiful, but it gets crowded. Your backyard doesn't have to. We're 45 minutes away, close enough to give you personal attention but far enough that we're not stretched thin across a hundred concurrent jobs. Your sport court gets the focus it deserves, from soil prep through final line painting.
Henry County clay is stubborn. It holds water like a bathtub, which sounds great until your court becomes a skating rink after rain. We start every McDonough installation with a perforated base layer and proper slope—not the generic approach you'd get from a big-box installer. Your subdivision's lot sizes vary wildly depending on whether you're in the newer sections or the more established neighborhoods near McDonough Square. Some courts fit in 2,000 square feet; others need 3,500. We measure twice, plan once. Sun exposure in this area is intense mid-May through September, so UV-resistant synthetic surfaces aren't optional—they're essential if you want your court looking good in five years, not two. Many HOA communities in Henry County allow sport courts, but they've got specific color palettes and setback requirements. We pull those docs before we schedule your consultation. The rapid-growth subdivisions around here mean your neighbors are probably thinking about similar improvements, which actually makes installation logistics easier. No competing contractors fighting for equipment access on the same block.
Yes, but only if it's built right. We install a perforated base layer beneath the playing surface, paired with a slight grade slope that moves water toward proper drainage zones. Henry County clay is dense, so we don't cut corners on subsurface prep. This is why local installation matters—we know the soil, not guessing based on generic regional specs.
Recycled rubber infill and permeable polyurethane binders reduce landfill waste while maintaining performance. These materials also stay cooler than traditional asphalt, which matters during our hot summers. You're also reducing runoff into local stormwater systems—a real benefit for Eagle's Landing and Kelleytown neighborhoods with growing development.
Most McDonough HOAs do, with conditions. Color restrictions and setback rules are common. We review your community's documentation before quoting and can help you navigate approval conversations. We've worked with dozens of Henry County boards and know what they typically approve.
A standard 3,500-square-foot court takes 5–7 business days from site prep through final surfacing. Clay prep is our longest phase because we're not rushing it. You'll see fast progress once the base is locked in, and weather usually isn't an obstacle in spring and fall.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.