Winter Care — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Peachtree Corners homeowners in The Forum and around Technology Park have figured out something smart: a putting green doesn't have to be a maintenance nightmare. We talk to neighbors here all the time who've torn out patchy bermuda or fescue just to keep up with the Gwinnett clay and Georgia humidity. An artificial putting green changes that equation completely. You get year-round play without the seasonal brown-out, without fighting that heavy clay soil that doesn't drain like you'd want it to, and without spending weekends with a fertilizer spreader. Whether you've got a compact lot behind your home office or a bigger backyard near Jones Bridge Park, artificial turf for putting greens handles our climate differently than natural grass. No winter dormancy, no summer stress from heat and humidity, no algae creeping in during our wet springs. It's the kind of upgrade that actually simplifies your yard instead of adding another chore to the list.
Peachtree Corners sits on Gwinnett clay, which is dense and doesn't naturally drain the way a putting green needs it to. Real grass putting greens here face serious challenges: compaction, standing water after our spring rains, and uneven settling over time. That's where artificial turf wins. During winter months—December through February—our temps rarely drop hard enough for freeze-thaw damage to turf, but natural greens do brown out, which looks rough when you actually want to putt. Artificial putting green installations in your ZIP codes (30092, 30096, 30097) require proper base preparation on that clay. We excavate, add crushed stone drainage layer, then compact and level before laying the turf. Sunlight patterns matter here too: The Forum and Technology Park neighborhoods have varying tree canopy, so some yards get full sun exposure while others have afternoon shade. Unlike natural grass, artificial turf handles both without needing shade-tolerant seed blends or sun-scorch recovery. HOA guidelines in Peachtree Corners typically allow synthetic turf for recreational spaces, though it's smart to check your specific community rules. Most residential lots here support a putting green without excavation complications, and we've handled everything from 200-square-foot accent greens to 500-plus-square-foot practice setups.
No. Our winters don't freeze hard enough or long enough to damage quality synthetic turf. In fact, artificial greens play consistent November through February—no brown dormancy like natural grass experiences. You'll actually get more playable days in winter with artificial turf than with real grass in Gwinnett County.
It's the main reason artificial turf wins here. Clay compacts unevenly and holds water, which destroys natural putting surfaces. Our installation process accounts for it: proper excavation, drainage rock, and compaction create a stable base that clay alone can't provide. Artificial turf over that prepared base stays level and playable year-round.
Absolutely. Artificial turf doesn't require the 6+ hours of direct sun that natural grass demands. Shade yards in The Forum area are actually ideal candidates—no sun stress, no thin spots, and consistent playing surface regardless of your tree canopy. We design around your specific light patterns.
Minimal. Brush the nap occasionally to keep the pile standing, remove debris, and rinse after heavy rain to clear any sediment. That's it. No fertilizing, no aerating, no dormancy worries like you'd face with natural bermuda. Winter actually becomes your premium playing season instead of a waiting period.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.