Townhome — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
McDonough's neighborhoods—Eagle's Landing and Kelleytown especially—have exploded with townhomes and compact residential properties over the past decade. That's great for the community, but it also means most yards here are smaller, more visible to neighbors, and under closer scrutiny from HOA guidelines. A sport court makes perfect sense in that context. You get a dedicated space for basketball, pickleball, or tennis without sacrificing the entire backyard, and it actually raises your home's appeal. We've installed dozens of courts in Henry County, and the difference between a worn-out clay-based yard and a clean, functional sport surface is night and day. McDonough homeowners appreciate having that multi-use space—kids can shoot hoops, you can host a casual game with neighbors, and your property maintains its curb appeal. The Henry County clay soil that sits under most yards here doesn't drain well naturally, so having a purpose-built court with proper base prep keeps things functional year-round, even after our humid summers and spring downpours. We handle the site assessment, drainage planning, and installation in a way that works with your lot's actual conditions, not against them.
Henry County's clay-heavy soil is a real factor when you're planning a sport court in McDonough. That clay holds water, which means standing puddles aren't just annoying—they'll compromise your court's integrity if drainage isn't engineered right from the start. We always recommend a gravel and crushed stone base layer that slopes appropriately, especially in the newer subdivisions around Eagle's Landing where the ground was heavily compacted during construction. Most McDonough townhomes sit on quarter-acre to half-acre lots, so space planning is critical. A 30x60 court (regulation basketball) takes up most of a side yard, which is why we often work with homeowners on slightly smaller dimensions that still function great but fit the actual property lines. Sun exposure varies—some lots face north and stay shaded much of the day, others get brutal afternoon heat. That matters for surface selection and long-term wear. Heritage Park nearby means you've got community recreation benchmarks, and most HOAs in the area have specific rules about court setbacks, fencing, and lighting. We review those covenants upfront so you're never installing something that violates your neighborhood agreement. The timeline for installation usually runs 5–7 days depending on base prep complexity.
Almost certainly yes. Eagle's Landing and Kelleytown both have active HOAs with landscape and exterior modification rules. We always recommend reviewing your covenants first, then submitting a design plan to your HOA for approval before we break ground. It usually takes 2–3 weeks for review. We can help with that paperwork—it's better to get it right upfront than have issues later.
Clay soil drains poorly, so we always install a robust gravel base and ensure proper slope. Without it, water pools and accelerates surface degradation. We'll evaluate your specific lot's drainage patterns during the site visit. Maintenance stays the same year-round, but proper base prep upfront saves you headaches in our humid Georgia summers.
Most townhomes here run 0.25 to 0.5 acres. A 25x50 court (half-court basketball with pickleball lines) fits well in side yards and maintains setbacks. Full regulation courts work on larger lots. We'll measure your actual space and show you scaled options so you're not guessing.
Typical installation runs 5–7 days. We work standard business hours and manage dust and noise responsibly—important in tight neighborhoods like McDonough's. Heavy equipment work (grading, compacting) happens early in the week so things settle before weekends. We'll brief you on the timeline before starting.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.