Turf Weight — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Newnan's got that perfect blend of suburban charm and growing families who actually use their yards—and we've noticed a real uptick in homeowners around Downtown Newnan and The Lakes at Glenrochie asking about sport courts. The red clay soil in Coweta County plays a role in why artificial turf makes so much sense here. Instead of fighting that dense, compacted earth every spring or dealing with mud around your court, you get a stable, level playing surface that handles Georgia's humidity without turning into a swamp. We're talking about a space where your kids can play basketball or run drills year-round without you stressing about drainage or uneven ground. Most of our Newnan installations take advantage of existing flat areas—whether that's near Carl Miller Park or in those newer subdivisions where lot layouts are more predictable. The upfront investment pays itself back fast when you're not replacing worn grass, leveling divots, or explaining to the HOA why your backyard looks like a mud pit after rain. A quality sport court here isn't just recreation; it's peace of mind in Georgia weather.
Coweta County's red clay is beautiful to look at on the surface, but underneath it's dense and doesn't drain like sandy soil. That matters for sport courts because you need a solid, dry base. We typically excavate, grade, and install proper drainage layers before the turf goes down—especially in newer subdivisions where the soil's still settling. Newnan's summer sun is intense, so turf color stability becomes real. The neighborhoods around Downtown Newnan and The Lakes at Glenrochie see varying shade patterns depending on mature tree coverage, which influences how much UV exposure your court gets. We factor that in during the design phase because uneven shading can affect wear patterns. Most yards in this area are sized between a quarter-acre and half-acre, which gives plenty of room for a dedicated sport court without eating your entire backyard. One thing specific to Newnan: some HOAs have landscape guidelines, so we always recommend checking your deed restrictions before committing. We've handled enough installations here to know the quirks of local lot configurations, and we build in proper edge treatments and perimeter drainage to handle Georgia's heavy summer thunderstorms.
Not if it's done right. That Coweta County clay is compacted and needs proper grading and drainage layers underneath, but it actually creates a stable base for your court. We excavate, slope for water runoff, and install a crushed stone base so rain doesn't pool. The clay itself isn't the enemy—poor prep work is. We've installed dozens in your area, and when you follow the right steps, that clay becomes your foundation.
Modern synthetic turf is engineered for exactly this. Georgia heat can fade cheaper materials, but quality sport-court surfaces use UV-stabilized fibers that hold color through our brutal summers. Drainage we install handles humidity spikes, and the turf itself won't puddle or get squishy like natural grass does after thunderstorms. Your court stays playable even on the worst summer days.
Most residential sport courts take 3–5 days once we've prepped the site. Prep work—excavation, grading, drainage—adds another 2–3 days depending on your yard's current condition and that Coweta clay we're working with. We try to schedule around rain forecasts because ground saturation slows everything down. We'll give you a timeline after the site visit.
Depends on your neighborhood. The Lakes at Glenrochie and some other subdivisions have landscape guidelines you'll want to review. We always recommend checking your deed restrictions before we get rolling. Some HOAs require landscaping buffers or have setback rules. A quick call to your HOA and a look at your paperwork usually answers it, and we're happy to help you understand what applies to your lot.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.