Drainage Solutions — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Picture this: it's July in Newnan, your pool is crystal clear, and your back deck is completely dry within minutes of someone getting out. That's what proper pool-area turf and drainage can do for your home. We work with homeowners throughout Coweta County—from the newer subdivisions around The Lakes at Glenrochie to properties closer to Downtown Newnan and Carl Miller Park—and one thing keeps coming up: that red clay soil we've all got here doesn't play nicely with standing water. It compacts, it stays soggy, and it turns your pool deck into a slip hazard or a mud pit depending on the season. Artificial turf around a pool isn't just about aesthetics, though it definitely looks sharp. It's about solving a real drainage problem that's baked into our local soil conditions. We've installed hundreds of pool-turf systems across the area, and the difference between a properly drained deck and a poorly installed one shows up the first time it rains. Your family deserves a safe, dry, usable space around that pool investment. That's what we build.
Newnan sits on Coweta County's notorious red clay—the same stuff that makes spring yard work feel like digging through concrete. When you've got a pool, that clay becomes your enemy: water pools on top instead of draining through, creating a swampy mess that artificial turf alone won't fix. That's why our installations here always prioritize a complete drainage system underneath. We're talking perforated base layers, proper grading, and sometimes French drains running away from your pool deck, especially in the newer subdivisions where the grading was rushed during development. Sun exposure varies significantly depending on whether you're in a mature neighborhood near Downtown or in one of the newer builds where tree coverage is still developing. Cooler, shadier pool areas actually perform better with artificial turf—less heat retention, lower maintenance. Homeowners in HOA communities (common in The Lakes at Glenrochie area) should verify color and pile-height restrictions before installation; most accept quality pool turf, but it's worth confirming. Average residential lots in Newnan range from quarter-acre to half-acre, so your pool deck is probably 300–600 square feet of actual surface area. That's large enough that drainage design matters tremendously.
Not without the right foundation. Our Newnan installations include engineered drainage layers beneath the turf—crushed stone, perforated pipe, and sloped base preparation that compensates for clay's poor drainage. We don't just lay turf on top of clay and hope. The system works with gravity and the clay's properties to move water away from your pool deck and property.
Most do, but requirements vary. We recommend pulling your CC&Rs or contacting your HOA board before design starts. Typical restrictions involve pile height, color (usually natural greens), and seam visibility. We've worked with Newnan-area HOAs for years and know how to spec turf that meets their standards while delivering the drainage performance you need.
Pricing depends on square footage, existing drainage condition, and soil prep. Newnan's red clay sometimes requires more base work than sandy soils elsewhere, which affects cost. We provide free on-site estimates for Coweta County properties. Most residential pool decks run between mid-range and premium pricing—worth the investment given our climate and soil challenges.
Absolutely. That's actually one of our most common Newnan projects. We excavate, install proper drainage infrastructure (including grading adjustments), then lay the turf system. Standing water is a sign the site needs professional drainage design, not just cosmetic coverage. Once we're done, your deck will drain in minutes, not hours.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.