Rv Pad — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
RVs are a big deal in Suwanee—whether you're parking a travel trailer at home or need a dedicated pad that looks polished year-round, artificial turf solves what natural grass can't handle in Gwinnett County. That red clay soil we deal with here drains okay in most suburban yards, but add constant tire tracks, heavy weight, and seasonal mud, and you've got a mess. Artificial turf gives you a clean, durable surface that handles the abuse without turning into a muddy eyesore every spring. Neighborhoods like Suwanee Station and Shadowbrook have homeowners who get it—they want their yards functional and attractive, not beat up by vehicle traffic. We've installed plenty of RV pads across the area, and the difference between a properly built artificial turf installation and a DIY attempt is night and day. You're looking at a surface that drains, stays level, and looks intentional—not like you just rolled out some carpet in your driveway. LawnLogic has been doing this work in the greater Atlanta area for years, and we know exactly how to prep Suwanee yards so your RV pad lasts.
Suwanee's clay-based soil is stable but dense, which actually works in our favor for RV pad installations. We don't fight excessive drainage issues like you'd see in sandier counties. That said, we still build proper base layers and perimeter grading to handle Georgia's rainy springs and summer downpours. The real consideration here is sun exposure—depending on whether your lot faces the Town Center Park side of Suwanee or backs toward the Suwanee Creek Greenway corridor, shade patterns change dramatically. A pad that gets full afternoon sun will feel and perform differently than one under mature oaks. We assess this during the site visit because it affects material selection and longevity. Most Suwanee lots run a quarter-acre to half-acre, so space isn't tight, but we do see some HOA restrictions in the Station and Shadowbrook communities. Some require edging or landscaping integration rather than a bare pad. We handle all that in the design phase. Installation is straightforward once we get the grading right—compacted base, proper slope for water runoff, and secure fastening. In clay soil, anchoring holds well.
Not really. Gwinnett clay is actually stable for pad installations—it compacts well and doesn't shift like sandier soils. We prep it correctly, slope for drainage, and lay a proper base. The clay works with us, not against us. We do make sure water sheds away from your foundation and doesn't pool at the pad edges.
Some do, some don't. We've worked with both communities and know the typical restrictions—edging, color standards, that sort of thing. We handle it in the initial planning. Bring your CC&Rs to the consultation, and we'll make sure your design passes approval before we break ground.
Depends on your lot. We evaluate shade from mature trees and surrounding homes during the site visit. Full-sun pads and shaded pads perform similarly, but we may recommend different materials or edge treatments based on exposure. Shade actually helps in summer heat, but it doesn't hurt durability either way.
Most pads take 2–3 days start to finish, assuming typical lot conditions and no surprises during prep. Clay soil usually cooperates, so we're rarely delayed by ground conditions. Larger pads or complex edging might add a day. We'll give you an exact timeline during the estimate.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.