Winter Care — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Sport courts in Peachtree Corners are becoming a smart investment for families who want year-round play without the maintenance headaches that come with natural grass. Your kids can shoot hoops or practice tennis in January without worrying about muddy Gwinnett clay ruining their shoes—or your landscape. We've installed plenty of courts across the tech-corridor neighborhoods here, from The Forum area homes to properties near Curiosity Lab, and the feedback is consistent: families love having a dedicated play space that actually performs in Georgia weather. Winter's the perfect time to think about this project. Your yard isn't locked under snow; it's just sitting there, and if you're tired of the seasonal grass-care routine, a synthetic sport court eliminates that entirely. No raking, no reseeding, no winter dormancy stress. The courts we build handle Peachtree Corners' mix of sun and shade beautifully, and they're designed to shed Georgia's spring rains without pooling. Installation typically wraps up in just a few weeks, so you could have kids playing on a brand-new court before spring sports season hits.
Peachtree Corners sits on Gwinnett clay, which is naturally dense and doesn't drain as quickly as sandy soils. That's actually one of the best reasons to go with synthetic turf for a sport court—clay compacts over time, and grass struggles with our wet winters. Your yard probably gets a mix of morning sun and afternoon shade depending on where you're building, especially if you're in The Forum area where mature trees are common. Most lots in the 30092 and 30096 zip codes range from half-acre to two acres, giving us plenty of room to position a court where it drains naturally and gets decent light. HOA guidelines in Peachtree Corners subdivisions typically approve sport courts when they're set back appropriately and use neutral colored surfaces, so we'll handle those conversations. The real advantage during winter is that our base prep accounts for Georgia's freeze-thaw cycles. We're not just laying turf on raw clay; we're building a foundation that prevents settling and keeps your court level through seasonal moisture changes. Spring runoff from Gwinnett's heavy rains won't create divots or soft spots.
Gwinnett County requires a land disturbance permit for most sport court installations, especially if you're grading or adding fill material. We handle all that paperwork and coordinate with the county. Depending on your HOA, there may also be architectural review needed. It's one of the reasons calling us early matters—we know the local requirements and won't let red tape slow down your project timeline.
Georgia winters are mild, but we still get freeze-thaw cycles and wet conditions that matter. Synthetic sport courts actually perform better than natural grass in winter because they don't get slippery when wet, and they drain quickly even with heavy January and February rains. The clay base we use accounts for Gwinnett's soil conditions, so expansion and contraction won't create gaps or settling problems.
From site survey to final line-marking, most courts take 2–3 weeks depending on weather and existing yard conditions. Winter's actually ideal because we're not fighting around established grass growth, and the cooler temps help our base materials set properly. We'll give you a solid completion date once we assess your Gwinnett clay soil.
Absolutely. Synthetic turf doesn't need sunlight to stay playable like grass does. If your property in the Technology Park or Forum area gets afternoon shade from trees, that's not a limitation—it's actually a benefit because the court won't get as hot in summer and wear patterns are more even across seasons.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.