Holiday Ready — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Pool season in Peachtree Corners doesn't really end—it just shifts. Whether you're in The Forum area catching those shoulder-season weekends or over near Technology Park where the neighborhoods stay active year-round, a synthetic turf deck around your pool transforms your backyard into something genuinely usable. The thing about Gwinnett clay soil is that it stays wet, stays compacted, and doesn't drain the way you'd hope. Around a pool? That's a recipe for mud, slippery concrete, and a deck that never really dries out. Artificial turf solves that entirely. It drains fast, stays cool underfoot even in Georgia heat, and doesn't track mud through your house or onto your pool deck. We've installed dozens of pool-side turf setups in neighborhoods like yours, and the response is always the same: homeowners ask why they didn't do it sooner. Whether you're thinking about this for holiday entertaining coming up or just tired of maintaining a soggy natural grass situation, we can talk through what works for your specific pool layout and yard.
Peachtree Corners sits on heavy Gwinnett clay, which is beautiful for building but honestly terrible for drainage around pools. That clay holds water like a sponge that doesn't want to let go. Rainfall in Gwinnett—and we get plenty of it—means your natural grass stays saturated, especially in shaded spots near tree lines. A lot of homes here have larger lots with mature oaks and pines, which creates these cool microclimates but also uneven sun exposure. Our turf accounts for that: we recommend different pile heights and drainage systems depending on whether your pool deck gets six hours of direct sun or if you're mostly in dappled shade. HOA guidelines in The Forum and surrounding areas typically allow synthetic turf, but we always verify before breaking ground. Installation around pools requires careful grading to slope water away from your pool equipment and toward proper drainage—something we've perfected in Gwinnett's specific conditions. The perimeter work matters too: we make sure your turf transitions cleanly to concrete or pavers, so you're not dealing with pooling water at the edges or debris creeping onto the artificial surface.
Not at all. Modern synthetic turf is chlorine-resistant and built to handle splash zones. We see this constantly around Gwinnett pools. If chlorinated water or sunscreen ends up on the turf, a quick rinse with fresh water keeps it in perfect shape. The real enemy of pool decks here is that heavy clay soil creating standing water—turf eliminates that problem entirely.
It's ideal. Guests can walk barefoot without worrying about wet grass or mud on the concrete. There's no cleanup of clippings, no soggy patches to avoid. Your deck stays dry, usable, and visually clean—especially important if you're hosting gatherings in Peachtree Corners' cooler months when pools aren't heated but patios are still active spaces.
Not significantly. We work around active pools all the time. The deck area gets prepared separately from the pool itself. Depending on your setup, we typically plan the work in phases—staying away from your equipment, avoiding any chemical disturbance. Total timeline is usually a few days, and we coordinate around your pool schedule.
Upfront, turf costs more. But within a year or two, maintenance savings pay dividends. No weekly mowing, no drainage headaches from Gwinnett clay, no replacing dead patches. Holiday season especially—you skip all the late-fall prep work. Over five years, artificial turf around a pool typically costs less than natural grass maintenance in our climate.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.