Lifetime Warranty — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Senoia's red clay doesn't play nice with water. If you've walked around the Historic District or the quieter residential blocks near downtown, you've probably noticed how quickly puddles form after rain—and how long they stick around. That's the Coweta County clay doing its thing: dense, slow-draining, and stubborn. When we install artificial turf here, drainage isn't an afterthought. It's the foundation. We've been working in and around Senoia long enough to know that a yard with poor drainage is a yard that'll develop soft spots, algae growth, and that swampy smell that nobody wants. The good news? Proper subsurface drainage turns those problem areas into usable outdoor space year-round. Whether you're dealing with a small Historic District lot or a larger property on the outskirts, we size the drainage system to handle Senoia's rainfall patterns and that heavy clay base. Our lifetime warranty covers the turf *and* the drainage infrastructure underneath—because we stand behind the whole system, not just the visible part. Most homeowners see the difference after the first heavy rain.
Coweta County's red clay is the big wildcard. It's great for keeping topsoil in place, but it sheds water instead of absorbing it. Most Senoia yards sit on slopes that look gentle until you're trying to grade them properly. We account for that. Lot sizes here vary—you might have a tight quarter-acre near downtown or a sprawling property closer to the county edges—and we adjust our perforated base layer and drainage stone depth accordingly. Senoia gets moderate tree cover depending on your neighborhood; some yards catch afternoon shade from mature oaks, which actually helps the turf stay cool in summer. Others are wide open. Both scenarios work with artificial turf, but drainage design shifts. We've installed plenty of systems for homeowners who wanted to eliminate the mud pit that forms during Georgia's spring rains or the standing water issues that pop up after summer thunderstorms. The Historic District has some HOA-adjacent considerations—nothing that stops artificial turf, but we always confirm local guidelines before we start. Our subsurface system includes a perforated pipe layer that channels water away from the root zone, preventing the pooling and soggy base that kills durability.
Coweta County's red clay compacts over time and resists water infiltration. If your yard has any slope or low spots, water pools there instead of percolating down. Artificial turf with proper drainage systems solves this by routing water horizontally through a perforated base layer, then away from the turf zone entirely. Most Senoia yards we've worked on see improvement within the first rainfall after installation.
Absolutely. Historic District properties often have smaller, established lots with trees and character—perfect for turf. We don't need to remove large mature trees, and the aesthetic works well with the neighborhood's charm. Just confirm any HOA or deed restrictions before scheduling. We handle that conversation and make sure everything stays compliant.
We warranty the entire system—turf, infill, perforated base layer, and drainage stone—for life. If the subsurface drainage fails or water pooling develops after installation, we repair or replace it at no charge. Most installers only warrant the turf itself. We're betting on the engineering, not just the surface.
A typical residential job takes 3–5 days depending on yard size and existing grade work. We excavate, lay perforated pipe, install drainage stone, then set the turf. Senoia's clay usually requires a deeper base layer than sandy soils, so we budget accordingly. Weather can add a day or two—clay doesn't cooperate when it's saturated.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.