Clay Soil — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Peachtree City's golf-cart community lifestyle means your backyard needs to work as hard as you do. Between the neighborhoods of Kedron, Braelinn, and Glenloch, we see a lot of families who want their yards to be ready for anything—whether that's pickup basketball games, tennis matches, or just a surface that doesn't turn into a mud pit after a Georgia rain. That's where a sport court comes in. Instead of fighting Fayette County's dense clay soil every spring, you get a professional-grade playing surface that stays firm, drains fast, and looks sharp year-round. We've installed dozens of these across Peachtree City, and the difference is immediate: no more compacted dirt, no more uneven footing, and no more excuses to skip game day. Your neighbors at The Fred and Drake Field know what real courts feel like—now you can have that same reliability right at home.
Fayette County clay is notoriously tough to work with. It compacts hard in dry weather, stays soggy after rain, and creates an uneven playing surface that wears unevenly over time. A sport court solves this by sitting on top of the clay rather than fighting it. We account for the heavy moisture that pools in yards throughout Kedron, Braelinn, and Glenloch by ensuring proper subsurface drainage—critical in a community where thunderstorms roll through regularly. Most Peachtree City lots are generous enough to accommodate a half-court or full-court setup without eating into your golf-cart storage or landscaping. HOAs in these neighborhoods typically embrace quality improvements that boost home value, and a well-maintained sport court definitely qualifies. Sun exposure varies depending on your neighborhood's tree canopy, so we assess shade patterns early to recommend the right surface material. Installation on clay requires base prep and compaction that our crew handles from the ground up—no surprises, no settling six months later.
Yes, if it's built right. We compact the clay base, add a crushed-stone sublayer for drainage, and install engineered underlayment before the court surface goes down. Peachtree City's clay actually becomes stable once properly prepared. We've seen courts hold up perfectly for 10+ years when installed with the right foundation. The clay itself isn't the enemy—poor drainage and inadequate prep are.
Sport courts are designed for exactly this. Our surfaces are permeable and slope slightly to shed water into the drainage system beneath. Humidity won't damage the court itself; in fact, it keeps the acrylic playing surface from getting too hard. You'll be playing within hours of a Georgia downpour, unlike clay courts that need days to dry out.
Most lots can accommodate at least a half-court (30'x50'), and many fit a full court (94'x50' for tennis, 94'x84' for basketball). We do a free site walk to measure available space and work around trees, utilities, and your golf-cart parking. Rarely does lot size become the limiting factor in Peachtree City.
Most neighborhoods allow them, especially when they're well-maintained and add to curb appeal. We help you navigate HOA requirements in Kedron, Braelinn, and Glenloch. A sport court is typically viewed more favorably than a cracked clay pad, so approval usually follows once you submit plans.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.