Contractor — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Sandy Springs homeowners have figured something out: a putting green isn't just a luxury—it's the perfect answer to yards that don't cooperate. Whether you're in Riverside dealing with that dense tree canopy, or you've got a Powers Ferry lot that's all clay and shade, a custom putting green transforms dead space into something you'll actually use. We've installed dozens across the city—from compact 200-square-foot setups near Mount Vernon to full-featured practice greens in backyards overlooking the Chattahoochee River NRA. The beauty of artificial turf for putting is that it works year-round, handles the Atlanta humidity without turning spongy, and gives you that consistent roll you'd only get at a country club. No more watering, no fungus issues from our wet springs, and honestly, no more excuses to skip practice. Most of our Sandy Springs clients tell us they use their greens three or four times a week. That's the kind of ROI you don't get from sitting in traffic on GA-400.
Sandy Springs' landscape throws some real challenges at natural turf—especially putting greens. The Fulton County clay base stays wet longer than ideal, and if you're tucked under mature oaks in Riverside or Powers Ferry, you're fighting shade that would kill most grass varieties. That's where artificial green is honest work. We size and pitch every green to handle our local drainage patterns, making sure spring rains don't pool. The clay also means we're precise about base preparation; we're not just rolling out turf and hoping. Heat isn't your main problem here—humidity is. Real grass stays damp in our climate, inviting brown patch and dollar spot fungus. Artificial stays playable and dry. Most Sandy Springs yards we work with fall into the 300-to-800-square-foot range, which is tight but totally workable for a quality short-game practice area. We also see a lot of HOA properties in the 30328 and 30342 zips, so we're used to navigating approval processes and making sure your green fits the neighborhood aesthetic. That mature canopy? We actually factor that into sight lines and lighting during the design phase.
Absolutely. This is actually our sweet spot. The thick oak canopy in Riverside and Powers Ferry properties normally makes real grass impossible—but artificial turf doesn't need sunlight. We've built greens that get three to four hours of dappled light and perform perfectly. The shade also keeps the turf cooler in summer, which some people prefer. Just make sure your installer clears leaf debris regularly, and you're golden.
It's the main reason artificial makes sense here. Fulton clay holds water, which causes puddling and fungal issues on real greens. We build proper subsurface drainage and use a compacted base that keeps water moving. Installation takes a bit longer than it might in sandy regions, but the payoff is a green that stays playable after heavy spring rains—and that matters in Atlanta.
We handle this all the time in 30328 and 30342. Most HOAs approve putting greens as long as they're backyard-focused and don't create drainage or aesthetic issues. We'll work with your association on design if needed. Rarely a problem, but it's worth checking your CC&Rs before committing to the project.
Surprisingly little. Brush it weekly to keep the pile upright, blow off leaves—especially important under Sandy Springs' mature trees—and rinse it occasionally in summer. No mowing, no fertilizer, no fungicide spraying. Most owners spend maybe 30 minutes a month on care. That's it.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.