Cleaning — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Sport courts in Suwanee backyards have become a serious game-changer for families in Shadowbrook and Suwanee Station who want to stop paying club fees and start playing at home. Whether your kids are into basketball, pickleball, or multi-sport training, artificial turf courts give you a reliable playing surface that handles Georgia's humid summers and actually drains properly—something the clay-heavy Gwinnett soil around here doesn't do naturally. We've installed dozens of these courts across the area, and the pattern is always the same: once families realize they can shoot hoops or volley serves without worrying about mud, dead patches, or scheduling around park hours, they wonder why they waited so long. The Town Center Park crowds are great, but your own court? That's convenience you can't beat. Our sport courts are built to withstand the stop-and-start movements, quick direction changes, and constant foot traffic that real athletic play demands—not just lawn-grade artificial turf. We design them with proper base preparation, edge containment, and infill systems that stay put through Suwanee summers.
Gwinnett County's clay-based soil is dense and tends to hold water, which actually works in your favor when we're installing a sport court. We excavate and grade properly so runoff flows away from your house and toward your yard's natural drainage patterns—something that matters especially if you're in one of the newer Suwanee Station developments where lot grading is tighter. The red clay here doesn't affect the artificial surface itself, but it does affect how we prepare the foundation. Most Suwanee properties get full sun exposure (especially homes backing toward the Greenway corridors), which means your court surface will hold heat in peak summer months—we recommend lighter-colored infill if that's your situation. Shade varies more in Shadowbrook depending on tree canopy, and that affects drainage speed and surface temperature during afternoon play. HOA rules in both neighborhoods typically allow recreational surfaces, but we always verify deed restrictions before breaking ground. Typical Suwanee lots accommodate 30-by-60 courts comfortably, though we've done smaller and larger depending on your space and sport focus. The suburban density here means we coordinate closely with neighbors about equipment access and noise during install.
Not in the way people worry about. Georgia humidity actually helps our infill stay settled and prevents the surface from becoming too hot. What matters is proper drainage—we slope our Suwanee courts so water doesn't pool. The clay soil underneath actually provides a solid, stable base once we've prepped it. Most courts here last 10-15 years with basic cleaning and occasional infill top-ups, even with heavy use.
Shadowbrook's HOA is generally receptive to recreational improvements, especially when they're contained in your backyard. We handle the documentation and technical specs they'll need. Because we've worked with Shadowbrook covenants before, the approval process typically moves fast. We recommend filing while we're doing your site survey—that's when questions get answered quickest.
Direct afternoon heat is common in Suwanee Station properties, so we recommend a lighter infill color and ensure the base composition reflects rather than absorbs heat. Polyethylene turf with sand-plus-rubber infill handles Gwinnett summers better than older systems. We can also add shade structures or strategic trees if your budget allows. Either way, the court will be cooler and last longer than natural grass ever would.
More than sandy soil, but it's worth it. We excavate 4-6 inches, compact the clay base, add a geotextile barrier, then lay a stone base for drainage. Gwinnett clay is actually stable—it won't shift—so once we've built the base correctly, you've got a permanent, level playing surface. That prep work is why our Suwanee courts stay game-ready year after year.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.