Flexible Payments — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Suwanee homeowners are investing in their backyards like never before, and a sport court hits that sweet spot between serious recreation and genuine year-round usability. Whether you're in Suwanee Station or Shadowbrook, that Gwinnett clay soil underneath your grass drains reasonably well—which actually works in your favor when we're installing artificial turf for basketball, pickleball, or tennis. The thing is, a sport court isn't just about slapping down some rubber and calling it done. It's about proper base preparation, the right infill system for your climate, and honestly, financing that makes sense for your household budget. We've worked with dozens of Suwanee families, and what keeps coming up is this: people want a durable, low-maintenance play surface without dropping $20,000 in one lump sum. That's exactly why flexible payment plans exist. Your kids get a legitimate court this spring, and you spread the cost across months instead of facing one brutal invoice.
Gwinnett County's clay-based soil is actually predictable to work with. It holds moisture, which means your base drainage layer needs attention—we're not just rolling turf over compacted earth and hoping for the best. The clay actually compacts nicely, though, so foundation settling isn't usually a headache once we've done it right. Suwanee's suburban lots tend to range from half-acre to one-acre properties, and most HOA communities (both Suwanee Station and Shadowbrook have active covenants) permit recreational surfaces as long as they're setback-compliant and don't look commercial. Sun exposure varies wildly depending on tree coverage near Town Center Park areas versus the more open neighborhoods. Morning shade from oak and pine clusters is common, which actually extends your turf's lifespan by reducing UV stress. We account for shade patterns during design—it affects everything from infill choice to surface temperature. Late spring through early fall, Suwanee gets hot and humid, so we recommend infill systems that don't retain excess heat. Winter's mild enough that freeze-thaw cycles aren't your enemy like they are farther north in Georgia.
Yes, but with conditions. Suwanee Station and Shadowbrook communities generally allow sport courts if they're in side or back yards, meet setback requirements, and don't look industrial. We handle the compliance conversation for you—we know what these HOAs typically approve. Always smart to pull your covenants, though, because specific architectural review rules vary by subdivision. Most approvals come through without drama.
Not if we build the base properly. Gwinnett clay compacts well, which is actually helpful. We install a permeable base layer that lets water move through instead of pooling. The clay underneath helps that drainage system stay stable. We've never had a Suwanee court fail due to base saturation when the prep work's done right.
A residential court typically runs 8,000 to 16,000 depending on size and surface specs. We offer monthly payment plans with approved credit, zero-down options for qualified buyers, and sometimes seasonal promotions. Many Suwanee families split costs across 12 or 24 months. Call us for a quote and payment breakdown—no obligation.
Spring's actually ideal in Suwanee. Soil's workable, humidity's not brutal yet, and families want the court ready for summer. We're booking spring projects now. Timeline from quote to completion is usually 2–3 weeks depending on weather and base prep complexity.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.