Before After — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Sport courts in Peachtree City are having a moment. Whether you're in Braelinn, Kedron, or Glenloch, homeowners are ditching the maintenance grind and installing artificial turf courts that actually hold up to Georgia's humidity and clay-heavy soil. The thing about this area is you've got a unique lifestyle—golf carts, established neighborhoods with strong HOA guidelines, and families who want their yards to be both functional and attractive year-round. A properly installed sport court does all that. We've worked with enough Peachtree City properties to know what works and what doesn't. Your lot size, the way your property drains, how much shade those mature trees throw—it all matters. That Fayette County clay underneath isn't going anywhere, but a well-engineered turf system transforms it into a solid foundation for tennis, pickleball, or multipurpose courts. No more muddy patches after rain. No brown spots from the summer heat. Just consistent, playable surface that neighbors actually envy. Local contractors who rush the base prep create problems that show up months later. We don't do that. From site assessment to final line marking, we're thinking about how your court will perform through Georgia summers and the occasional frost.
Peachtree City's clay-based soil is dense and doesn't drain naturally the way sandy soil does. That's actually the first thing we address during installation—proper base preparation is non-negotiable here. We're building up from that clay, not into it. Most of the properties we see in Braelinn and Glenloch have mature tree coverage, which is beautiful for the neighborhood aesthetic but creates shade patterns you'll want to map out. A court that's shaded 60% of the day plays cooler but also collects moisture longer after rain. Your HOA guidelines matter too. Peachtree City neighborhoods typically have landscape restrictions, and we make sure every court installation respects those covenants. Lot sizes here tend toward the generous side—you're not cramped—but that also means drainage patterns run differently than in compact subdivisions. Standing water against a turf court base is the enemy in humid Georgia. We slope everything correctly during installation so water moves away from the playing surface and toward your existing drainage paths. The golf-cart community layout also means easier access for our equipment during installation, which keeps your landscaping safer and our timeline tighter.
Clay compacts and holds water, so we can't just lay turf over it. We remove the top layer, install a proper drainage base with crush stone and perforated pipe, then add aggregate and sand before the turf goes down. It's extra steps, but it's the only way to prevent pooling and premature wear in Peachtree City's climate. Skip this and you'll have problems by year two.
Yes, if it's installed right. We engineer slope and subsurface drainage specifically for heavy rainfall. Water should move off the court within 24 hours. Poor drainage leads to algae growth, mold, and reduced surface life—we design every Peachtree City court to avoid that entirely.
Most Peachtree City HOAs approve courts as long as they're residential-grade and match neighborhood aesthetics. We handle the technical specs; you handle approval with your covenants office. Typically we provide renderings and material samples. Braelinn and Glenloch communities usually approve within 2-3 weeks if paperwork is complete.
A standard sport court takes 10-14 days from site prep through final surface installation, depending on weather and lot access. Peachtree City's golf-cart paths and wide properties actually make logistics easier than some metro Atlanta areas, which keeps us on schedule.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.