Money Back Guarantee — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Here's the thing about Peachtree City drainage problems: that Fayette County clay doesn't play nicely with water. We've worked with dozens of homeowners in Kedron, Braelinn, and Glenloch who've dealt with soggy yards, pooling water after rain, and that frustrating cycle of mud patches killing off natural grass. The golf-cart community lifestyle means your yard needs to function—whether that's for entertaining, play space, or just looking sharp from the cart path. Artificial turf with proper drainage installation solves this permanently. No more seasonal swamps. No more watching your neighbors' lawns stay green while yours turns brown. We back our drainage work with a money-back guarantee because we've seen how Peachtree City lots respond to the right system, and we're confident in what we install. Your yard should work for you, not the other way around.
Peachtree City sits on heavy Fayette County clay—the kind of soil that holds water like a sponge and drains like concrete. That's not a complaint; it's just reality here, and it's why proper subsurface drainage matters so much before laying artificial turf. Your lot size likely falls somewhere between typical golf-cart-community parcels: compact enough that every square foot counts, but large enough that water management becomes critical after heavy Georgia rainfall. Sun exposure varies significantly between the tree-lined neighborhoods. Braelinn and Glenloch have mature oak and pine canopy that affects both drainage patterns and UV wear on turf. Many HOAs in the area have specific guidelines about turf color and pile height—nothing crazy, but worth confirming before installation. We account for all this during the assessment. The clay base means we typically recommend a four-to-six-inch engineered base layer with crushed stone and perforated drainage pipe. It's not the cheapest approach, but it's the one that actually works in Fayette County soil and keeps water from pooling in your yard or your neighbor's.
Absolutely, but you need the right system underneath. Clay doesn't drain on its own, so we install a perforated pipe base layer that channels water away from your yard. This is standard for Peachtree City lots. Without it, you're just pushing water around. With it, water moves through the turf and base, then into the drainage line. That's why the subsurface design matters more than the turf itself in clay soil.
Most residential yards—typical Kedron or Braelinn lot sizes—take three to five days from start to finish. That includes excavation, base prep, drainage pipe installation, stone layers, and turf layout. Weather can add a day or two if we hit rain. We schedule the full process front-to-back, so you're not dealing with an open yard for weeks.
We guarantee that standing water won't return within two years of installation. If drainage fails—meaning water pools in the turf despite our system—we fix it at no cost or refund your installation fee. That's it. Simple. We've installed hundreds of systems in Georgia with this guarantee active; it's backed by our confidence in the work and our understanding of how Peachtree City yards actually drain.
Most HOAs care about appearance, not the mechanics underneath. Braelinn, Glenloch, and Kedron typically allow artificial turf if it looks natural and meets their color/height specs. Drainage systems are invisible, so they're not a concern. Always check your specific HOA guidelines before we start, but we've worked with nearly every community here and know the rules.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.