Color Options — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Building a sport court in Morrow means thinking differently about your yard. The Clayton County clay base, combined with the commercial corridor landscape around Southlake Mall and Clayton State, creates unique opportunities for families who want a dedicated play surface without the maintenance headaches of natural grass or the expense of constant repairs. We've installed sport courts throughout the Morrow area—from the neighborhoods near Clayton State University to properties closer to the Southlake Mall district—and every one of them tells the same story: homeowners get their yards back. Kids can play year-round without muddy cleats tearing up the lawn. Tennis and basketball happen on your schedule, not weather's. The color options available today let you match your home's aesthetic while choosing performance features that stand up to Georgia's humidity and summer heat. Most Morrow properties benefit from artificial turf because the underlying clay drainage challenges disappear entirely. You're not fighting the soil anymore; you're building on top of it with a surface engineered to shed water, resist fading, and feel natural underfoot.
Morrow's Clayton County clay is dense and holds water—that's the real reason artificial turf makes sense here. A traditional grass court would require constant regrading and drainage work to handle Georgia's summer rains and the occasional flash flooding patterns common to this area. Artificial sport courts bypass that entirely. The sun exposure varies across Morrow neighborhoods. Properties near Clayton State tend to have mature tree coverage, which keeps the court cooler but requires a turf blend that performs well in partial shade. Commercial corridor properties and those near Southlake have more direct afternoon sun, which actually benefits certain color choices and infill compositions. Installation on Clayton County clay is straightforward because we're not fighting poor drainage—we're leveraging it. Base preparation typically involves tamping existing soil, adding a stone layer, and installing the court surface. Homeowners in the Southlake and Clayton State areas often have standard residential lot sizes, so most sport courts fit within existing landscape footprints without major excavation. HOA restrictions vary by neighborhood, but most Morrow communities allow sport courts as long as they're screened or positioned appropriately. We handle those conversations upfront.
Actually, it helps. The clay's density means excellent drainage once we establish proper base layers. We don't need extensive underground systems like you'd see in sandier Georgia counties. For Morrow properties, we tamp the existing clay, add a stone base for stability, and proceed with the court surface. The clay's water-holding tendency is solved, not worked around.
Lighter colors—grays and tans—stay cooler underfoot during Clayton County summers, which matters if kids are playing barefoot or in sneakers during peak afternoon hours. Darker blues and greens are popular too and don't fade noticeably in Georgia sun if you choose UV-resistant infill. We can show samples at your property so you see how colors look in actual Morrow light conditions.
Most are, but rules vary by neighborhood. Some require screening or specific color palettes to match community aesthetics. We work with your HOA during the planning phase and have experience with Morrow's various covenant structures. We'll confirm what's permitted before you commit to design choices.
A typical residential sport court takes 3–5 days depending on site size and base preparation needs. Clayton County clay properties usually need straightforward grading and tamping, so we're not delayed by complex drainage work. We'll give you a timeline after the site assessment.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.