Before After — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Senoia's got character—that's what draws people here, whether you're exploring the Historic District or catching sight of those famous film crews at Raleigh Studios. But character doesn't always extend to backyards, especially when you're working with the red clay soil that comes standard in Coweta County. A sport court in your Senoia yard changes that equation entirely. Instead of fighting drainage issues or watching grass thin out under Georgia's summer heat, you get a surface that's ready for basketball, pickleball, or whatever you and your family want to throw at it. We've worked yards in Downtown Senoia and the neighborhoods beyond, and the transformation is real—suddenly that stubborn plot of land becomes the gathering spot on your street. Before-and-after, the difference isn't just visual. It's functional. Kids actually want to practice. Adults actually want to play. The red clay underneath stays where it belongs, and you stop spending weekends on maintenance that never quite works anyway.
Coweta County red clay is beautiful in its way, but it's relentless in wet weather. Drainage pools, grass struggles, and you end up with a perpetually muddy zone instead of a usable yard. That's where sport court installation gets strategic in Senoia. The base preparation matters enormously here—we're essentially creating a engineered platform that sits on top of that clay, with proper grading so water moves where you want it to. Most Senoia lots are modest by modern standards, inherited from an era when smaller footprints were the norm. That actually works in your favor for sport courts; you don't need a sprawling acre to create something genuinely useful. Sun exposure varies depending on whether you're in the Historic District with mature tree coverage or in one of the more open neighborhoods. Shaded courts stay cooler, but they can trap moisture in Georgia's humid summers, so drainage design shifts slightly. We size courts to fit real property lines and sight lines—no sense building something that dominates a tight lot. Local HOA guidelines in certain Senoia areas do have opinions about court colors and fencing, but nothing that prohibits them outright. We work within those parameters during design.
Yes, but we don't skip the base. Coweta County red clay requires a compacted stone foundation, proper slope for drainage, and sometimes a moisture barrier depending on your specific lot and water table. Think of it as the price of getting a surface that actually works year-round. Cutting corners leads to pooling and failure—not worth it.
A residential sport court usually runs 5–7 days from site prep through final surfacing. That includes excavation, base compaction, and court striping. Weather in Senoia can add a day or two if we hit unexpected rain, but we plan for Georgia's climate. Full timeline gets locked in during your consultation.
Most Senoia homes fit a half-court nicely—that's roughly 30×30 feet, plenty for basketball and multi-sport use. Full courts run 50×30, but they demand bigger property. We measure your actual usable space first and design around it, respecting your setbacks and sight lines.
Depends on your neighborhood. Some Senoia areas have HOA guidelines about court colors and fencing; others don't have restrictions at all. We review your local guidelines during the design phase and make sure everything passes before we break ground. No surprises.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.