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Sport courts have become the centerpiece of West Cobb backyards, and we're seeing it happen across Lost Mountain, Mars Hill, and the neighborhoods around Harrison High School. Families out here aren't settling for dead grass patches anymore—they're building dedicated spaces for basketball, pickle ball, tennis, or multi-sport play right at home. The thing about West Cobb's newer construction is that a lot of these lots came with builder-grade sod that doesn't hold up to Georgia heat and heavy foot traffic. A sport court solves that problem entirely. You get a professional-grade playing surface that handles the clay-heavy soil underneath, drains properly during our humid summers, and gives your kids a safe place to develop their game without wearing down into mud. We've installed dozens of these across the area, and the investment pays for itself in home value and family time. Whether you've got a spacious yard in the newer subdivisions or a tighter lot, we can design something that works.
Cobb County's clay soil is honestly both a challenge and why proper turf installation matters so much in West Cobb. That dense clay holds water longer than sandy soil, which is why we build sport courts with drainage systems that work *with* the local geology, not against it. The newer construction subdivisions here tend to have compacted soil from building activity, so we often need to prepare the base layer more carefully than we would in older neighborhoods. Sun exposure varies depending on whether you're nestled in the Mars Hill tree cover or on one of the open lots common around Harrison High School. We assess your yard's microclimate because some courts get afternoon shade that keeps temperatures down, while others bake in full sun. That affects both the turf material we recommend and how long your surface lasts. HOA rules in West Cobb developments typically allow sport courts, but we always verify with your community guidelines before breaking ground. Most yards in this area range from quarter-acre to half-acre, which gives us solid working space for a regulation or semi-regulation court. We handle the permitting questions and coordinate with your HOA so you don't have to.
Absolutely. Cobb County clay compacts hard and holds moisture, so we install a base layer system that includes proper grading and drainage channels. This prevents water from pooling under your court during our rainy seasons and keeps the clay from shifting underneath. We've done this hundreds of times in West Cobb neighborhoods, so we know exactly how to set it up for long-term stability.
Most residential sport courts take 3-5 days depending on site prep. Since we're just 12 minutes from West Cobb, we can be flexible with scheduling and do follow-up visits quickly if needed. Weather can add time—if we hit a rainy stretch, we pause to let the base cure properly before surfacing.
Most West Cobb communities allow sport courts, but we always check your specific HOA guidelines first. Some have setback requirements or aesthetic preferences. We'll handle the conversation with your HOA and provide design renderings so approval is straightforward.
Spring and early fall are ideal because the weather is stable and gives us clean, dry conditions for base work. We can install year-round, but our busy seasons are March-May and September-October when temperatures don't spike during installation. Summer heat isn't a blocker—it just takes longer for materials to cure.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.