Rv Pad — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
RV pads are becoming a smart move for Tyrone homeowners who want a dedicated parking surface without the hassle of concrete or gravel maintenance. Whether you're in the Shamrock area or closer to Tyrone Town Park, an artificial turf RV pad gives you a clean, level surface that handles Georgia's humid summers and occasional heavy rain without turning into a mud pit. We've installed dozens of these across Fayette County, and what keeps people coming back is how much easier life gets when you're not pressure-washing gravel dust off your motorhome or dealing with rutted mud after a storm. Turf-based RV pads drain fast, stay green year-round, and honestly, they look better than bare dirt or worn-out gravel. If you've got the space and you're tired of wrestling with ground prep every spring, let's talk about what a turf pad could do for your property.
Fayette County clay is thick and dense—that's your biggest consideration here in Tyrone. When it rains, clay holds water, which is why proper base preparation and drainage are non-negotiable for RV pads. We're talking a solid base layer, good slope, and perforated underdrain if your lot sits low. Tyrone's suburban landscape means you'll likely have mixed sun and shade depending on tree cover, especially in the Shamrock neighborhood where oaks are prevalent. That shade actually helps turf last longer in summer heat. Your RV pad dimensions matter too—most residential properties in this area have room for a standard 12x40 or 14x50 pad without eating up the whole yard. We always check existing drainage patterns during the site walk because clay doesn't forgive lazy grading. The payoff is a surface that handles Georgia's heat and humidity while your RV stays parked on something stable, not slowly sinking into red clay.
Absolutely—if it's installed right. Fayette County clay needs a compacted base layer (usually 4–6 inches of crushed stone) to prevent settling. The turf itself won't fail, but poor base prep will cause your pad to shift. We always engineer for your specific soil conditions before laying anything down.
Clay doesn't drain naturally, so we build slope and often install a perforated drain line underneath. Water flows off the turf surface into the subsurface system and away from your foundation. Without this, you'll end up with standing water—not ideal for RV storage or your yard.
A standard 12x40 pad runs roughly $2,500–$3,500 depending on base work and site conditions. Clay removal or significant grading adds cost. We quote site-specific because every property in Shamrock and Tyrone drains differently.
Many Tyrone subdivisions have landscape guidelines. Check your HOA covenants first—some allow turf pads readily, others require variance approval. We can help navigate that conversation and provide renderings if needed.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.