Installation — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Sandy Springs North sits in that sweet spot where Dunwoody's residential character meets Fulton County's suburban growth. Families here—especially those near the Abernathy corridor—are investing heavily in their outdoor spaces, and sport courts are becoming the centerpiece. We've worked with homeowners who were tired of hauling kids to Morgan Falls or waiting for North Springs MARTA station traffic to clear just to get to practice. A backyard sport court changes that equation. It's not just a surface; it's reclaiming your weekends. The clay-heavy North Fulton soil means your yard probably drains differently than neighborhoods south of Atlanta, and that matters when you're installing synthetic turf. We handle that. Our team knows the 30350 and 30328 zip codes well enough to anticipate what a yard actually needs—not what a generic installation guide suggests. Whether you're thinking basketball, pickleball, or multi-sport, we build courts that stand up to Georgia humidity and the occasional torrential downpour that comes through the area.
North Fulton clay is both your yard's personality and its challenge. It compacts, it holds water longer than sandy soils, and that means proper base preparation isn't optional—it's the difference between a court that plays true year-round and one that becomes a mini swamp every July. Most Sandy Springs North yards sit on slopes, which is actually helpful for drainage if we grade correctly. Sun exposure varies wildly depending on whether you're nestled near mature tree lines (common in the Dunwoody border neighborhoods) or in one of the newer, more open subdivisions along the Abernathy corridor. We'll walk your property and map shade patterns before quoting, because a court that bakes at 2 p.m. plays differently than one that gets afternoon relief. HOA guidelines in this area can be particular about court colors and fencing, so we'll pull those requirements upfront. Most residential yards here run 40–60 feet deep, which gives us room to work with without requiring lot splits. Winter frost heave is minimal, but the freeze-thaw cycle does stress seams, so we use installation methods that account for Georgia's unpredictable spring weather.
Yes, but manageable. Clay holds moisture and compacts differently than other soils. We excavate deeper, install a gravel base layer, and ensure French drain routing away from your court. It's extra work, but it prevents the soft spots and poor drainage that make other contractors' courts fail in Sandy Springs North after heavy rain.
Check with Fulton County, but most residential installations in 30350 and 30328 don't require permits if you're staying under 2,500 square feet and meeting setback rules. We verify with your HOA and local codes before breaking ground. Never skip this step—it saves headaches later.
For a standard basketball or pickleball court in Sandy Springs North, we're looking at 5–7 business days from site prep through final line painting. Weather can add a day or two, especially if we hit rain during base curing. We'll give you a realistic timeline once we assess your yard's drainage needs.
Absolutely, but shade affects playability and moss growth. A court under heavy tree canopy plays slower and requires more moss treatment in humid Georgia springs. We factor that into material selection and maintenance recommendations for yards along the Dunwoody border where shade trees are dense.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.