Wheelchair Accessible — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
A putting green in your Monroe backyard transforms how you spend your downtime—no more driving out to a course when you've got championship-level short game practice steps from your patio. Whether you're in the Good Hope area or closer to Downtown Monroe near the square, a custom putting green handles our Walton County climate beautifully while giving you that consistent, maintenance-free surface year-round. Here's what makes this different from throwing down some cheap synthetic: we build putting greens that actually break like real greens, drain properly through our Georgia clay, and stay playable whether it's 95 degrees in July or we're dealing with one of those unexpected winter wet spells. Wheelchair accessibility is built into every project we design—smooth transitions, firm putting surfaces, and no hidden slopes that catch people off guard. We've installed systems across the metro area, and Monroe homeowners appreciate that we're local enough to understand our soil and weather patterns, yet experienced enough to handle the technical side that separates a fun backyard feature from a genuine golfing asset.
Walton County's clay base is actually an advantage when you know how to work with it. That dense soil means excellent drainage once we've prepared the foundation properly—water doesn't pool the way it does in sandier areas. We typically excavate 6–8 inches, install a perforated base layer, and slope everything toward natural drainage patterns on your property. Monroe summers mean intense sun exposure, so we size your green to match the shade patterns around your home. Properties in the Downtown Monroe area and Good Hope neighborhood often have mature trees that create morning shade—valuable for playability in August. We design greens to accommodate whatever sunlight your lot actually gets, not the ideal 6–8 hours. Your putting surface stays firmer and truer when we're realistic about your microclimate. Accessibility isn't an afterthought here. We build with firm, level approaches, gradual transitions between elevation changes, and surfaces that wheelchairs navigate without sinking or sticking. The green itself sits on a stable base that won't shift under chair weight. Family members and friends using mobility devices can enjoy the space the same way everyone else does—that's the whole point.
Our clay soil is dense and holds moisture longer than sand-based soils, which is actually good news. We account for this by installing proper subsurface drainage—a perforated base layer that lets water move through without pooling. The clay also provides a stable foundation that won't shift seasonally, meaning your green stays level and consistent. That's why we don't fight the soil; we design the system to work with it.
Absolutely. We build level or gently sloped approaches, firm putting surfaces rated for wheelchair traffic, and smooth transitions without lips or drop-offs. The surface itself is durable enough that chair weight doesn't cause divots or sinking. We also ensure sight lines and approach angles work for seated golfers. Accessibility is engineered into the design, not bolted on afterward.
Yes. We design slope and subsurface drainage to handle Walton County's wet periods. Water moves through the putting surface into the perforated base layer and drains naturally across your property grade. Even after heavy rain, play resumes within hours. We size the system based on your actual yard drainage patterns and local seasonal rainfall.
Most greens perform best with 6–8 hours of direct sun, but we build systems for whatever your property offers. If the Good Hope area trees shade your yard in morning hours, we design accordingly. Morning or afternoon sun works fine; we avoid creating harsh afternoon glare. The key is matching the green's location to your yard's actual light exposure, not guessing.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.