Pool Deck Edge — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Your pool deck in Suwanee takes a beating. Between the heat, the humidity, and all that foot traffic during summer gatherings, standing water becomes a real problem—especially around those pool edges where drainage matters most. We've spent years working with Gwinnett County properties, and we know exactly how that clay soil behaves when it gets saturated. Natural grass? It turns into a muddy mess. Concrete cracks and shifts. But artificial turf with proper drainage? That's a different story entirely. You get a clean, dry surface year-round, no algae buildup, no slippery spots when the kids are running around. Whether you're in Suwanee Station or Shadowbrook, a well-installed synthetic turf system around your pool deck solves the drainage headache and gives you a surface that actually works in our Georgia climate. We handle the grading, the base layers, and the membrane work—all the invisible stuff that keeps water moving where it needs to go.
Suwanee sits on Gwinnett County clay, which is naturally dense and tends to hold water. That's your biggest challenge with pool decks. Clay drains slowly, and without intervention, water pools and creates safety hazards. Artificial turf works beautifully here because we install a proper subsurface system underneath—perforated layers, gravel base, and drainage channels that move water away from the pool edge and toward the yard's natural slope. Most Suwanee properties have moderate yard sizes, so edge-to-edge coverage is manageable and affordable. Sun exposure varies between tree-lined lots in Shadowbrook and more open properties near Suwanee Station, but modern synthetic turf holds up equally well in both conditions. One thing we always check: HOA guidelines. Many Suwanee subdivisions have landscape rules, and we make sure any artificial installation meets those standards before we break ground. The infill material we use—typically silica sand or crumb rubber—is rated for pool environments and won't degrade from chlorine or salt water splash. Installation timeline is usually 3–5 days for a pool deck, depending on existing conditions and whether we're removing old concrete.
No, not with the right materials. We install pool-grade turf and infill specifically formulated to handle chemical exposure common in Suwanee backyards. The drainage system we build ensures water doesn't pool around the fibers. Rinse the turf occasionally during heavy use months, and it'll last 12–15 years without degradation.
Clay is dense and compacts easily, which is why we don't rely on natural drainage alone. We excavate to proper depth, install a perforated membrane, add gravel and sand layers, and create a slope toward drainage outlets. This transforms Gwinnett clay from a liability into a stable base that keeps your pool deck dry year-round.
Modern pool-deck turf is cooler than concrete and won't burn bare feet like older synthetic materials. In Suwanee's heat, it does warm up, but proper infill and light-colored fiber options help. Chlorine splash rinses also cool it down naturally. Concrete, by contrast, becomes painfully hot and cracks from thermal stress.
Most do, especially when it replaces failing concrete or bare spots. We review your specific Suwanee Station or Shadowbrook guidelines beforehand and design the installation to comply. Some communities prefer certain colors or pile heights—we handle those details so your project sails through approval.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.