Satisfaction Guarantee — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
West Cobb homeowners deal with a drainage challenge that most don't see coming until it's too late. That clay soil around Lost Mountain and the Mars Hill area? It doesn't drain like you'd expect, especially after new construction settles. We've spent years watching yards in the 30127 and 30152 zip codes struggle with standing water, soggy spots that kill grass, and muddy patches near the Harrison High School neighborhoods that just won't dry out. The real problem isn't always the rain—it's what happens underneath. Artificial turf solves this in a way that natural grass simply can't, but only if the drainage system is built right from the start. We've installed hundreds of systems across West Cobb, and every single one comes with our satisfaction guarantee because we know what works in this specific soil and climate. Your yard deserves a solution that actually lasts, not a patch job that fails when summer thunderstorms hit.
Cobb County's clay composition is stubborn. It holds water instead of letting it perch, which means your West Cobb yard needs aggressive subsurface drainage planning—not just a base layer and hope for the best. New construction homes in Lost Mountain and surrounding areas often have compacted soil from heavy equipment, making drainage even more critical before you install turf. Most West Cobb properties sit on slopes that look gentle but actually channel water toward foundation areas or low corners of the yard. Sun exposure varies dramatically depending on tree coverage; newer developments near Harrison High School tend to be more open, while older Mars Hill neighborhoods have mature oak canopy that affects both turf performance and water movement. Lot sizes in West Cobb typically run 0.25 to 0.5 acres, which means your drainage solution needs to be efficient—you can't waste square footage on oversized perimeter trenches. We size every system to handle Cobb County's typical summer storm patterns, not just a light drizzle. The warranty on your turf depends on foundation work, so we don't cut corners on grading, compaction, or aggregate base selection.
Absolutely. Cobb County clay doesn't drain naturally, so standing water becomes a real problem if your base isn't engineered correctly. We see this constantly in Lost Mountain and the Mars Hill area—homeowners install turf without proper subsurface drainage and end up with soggy spots by late summer. Your satisfaction guarantee depends on us getting the foundation right, which means layers, slope, and perimeter trenching tailored to clay soil.
With proper installation, water should drain completely within 24 hours even after heavy rain. Our systems in the 30127 and 30152 zip codes are designed to handle the intense summer thunderstorms Cobb County gets. If water's pooling after rain, your drainage base wasn't built right—and that's exactly why we guarantee our work. We test every system before calling it done.
That's actually our specialty. We assess existing conditions, identify where water's pooling, and rebuild the foundation properly. Many homes near Harrison High School have grading issues from original construction that need correction. We'll fix those problems as part of your turf installation, not just cover them up. That's part of standing behind our guarantee.
Yes, but only if drainage is engineered first. Turf itself won't solve underlying water problems—proper grading, compaction, and subsurface drainage systems do. Once that's right, your yard stays clean and dry year-round, even during Cobb County's wet seasons. We've transformed dozens of muddy West Cobb yards with complete drainage-first installations.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.