Uv Protection — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
A putting green in your Snellville backyard isn't just a fun addition—it's a smart investment in a property that gets serious Georgia sun. Whether you're in the Snellville Towne Center area or over in South Gwinnett, your yard deals with intense UV exposure during spring and summer, and that's exactly why UV-protected artificial turf matters here. Real grass puts up a fight against our heat, but it fades, burns out, and demands constant watering during drought years. Artificial putting green turf is engineered differently. The top-tier synthetic options come with UV stabilizers built into the fiber itself, so your green stays vibrant season after season without the maintenance headaches. We've installed dozens of putting greens across Gwinnett County, and the homeowners in Snellville consistently tell us the same thing: they love the play surface, and they love not thinking about it. Your neighbors around Briscoe Park and The Towne Green are catching on too. A quality putting green can transform how you use your yard—early mornings before work, weekend practice rounds with family, or just impressing guests. The installation process works with Gwinnett's established lots and clay-heavy soil, and we handle all the drainage and base prep so you're left with a surface that plays true and lasts.
Snellville's clay soil is a factor we account for on every job. Clay holds water differently than sandy soil, so proper drainage under your putting green matters—we build a gravel and sand base that keeps moisture from pooling underneath, which extends turf life and keeps the playing surface consistent year-round. Sun exposure in South Gwinnett and around the Towne Center area is intense. Most residential lots get 6–8 hours of direct sun daily, sometimes more depending on tree coverage. UV-stabilized turf handles this without fading to that washed-out green you see on older synthetic greens. Gwinnett County lots tend to run medium-sized backyards—typically 4,000 to 8,000 square feet—which is ideal for a well-proportioned 400–600 square-foot putting green that doesn't dominate the space. HOA rules in some Snellville neighborhoods do permit artificial turf, but approval timelines vary, so we always confirm restrictions before starting. The clay base also means we occasionally hit rock or compacted soil during excavation, but that's a known quantity in this area and factors into our initial site assessment. Winter is mild enough that frost heave isn't a major concern, but summer heat and periodic heavy rain (especially during storm season) drive the need for solid subsurface engineering.
Yes. Standard synthetic turf fades under extended UV exposure, but products with UV inhibitors woven into the fiber resist that breakdown. In Gwinnett County's heat and sunshine, a quality UV-stabilized green will maintain its rich color for 8–10 years or longer. Cheaper alternatives cut corners here, and you'll see the difference by year two. We specify turf that's proven in Georgia's climate.
It changes the approach but doesn't derail the project. Gwinnett's clay needs a proper drainage layer—we use a gravel base and perforated pipes to shed water instead of letting it sit under the turf. This adds a step compared to sandy soil, but it's standard for us and prevents long-term problems like turf settling or moisture buildup.
Most Snellville residential yards work best with 400–600 square feet. That's enough for a 9-hole layout or a practice green with varied break patterns without consuming your entire backyard. We assess your specific lot size and sun patterns during the consultation to recommend the right footprint.
Proper drainage is the key. Our subsurface design channels water away from the turf surface so rain drains quickly instead of pooling. The playing surface dries faster than real grass and never becomes muddy or compacted. Snellville's established clay lots need this engineered approach to perform well long-term.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.