Women Owned — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
A lot of homeowners in Lost Mountain and the Mars Hill area ask us about sport courts because they're thinking about their kids' activities—maybe they've got teenagers who want a place to shoot hoops or practice volleyball without driving to Harrison High School every time. Here's the thing: a quality sport court isn't just about the court itself. It's about building something on your property that actually gets used, that handles Georgia weather, and that fits your family's real life. We're a women-owned business based just 12 minutes from your neighborhood, and we've installed enough courts in West Cobb to know exactly what works here. The newer construction lots around here have decent space, and we've learned how Cobb County's clay soil and our humid summers affect long-term performance. Whether your vision is a basketball court tucked into a side yard, a multi-sport setup, or something custom for your family's needs, we start by actually listening to what you want—not pushing you toward what's easiest for us to install. That's the difference.
West Cobb sits on clay-heavy soil that drains differently than you might expect, especially in the newer subdivisions around Lost Mountain. That clay base matters for sport court installation because proper drainage underneath prevents the pooling and shifting that can happen during our Georgia summers. We always recommend a engineered base layer here—it's an extra step, but it keeps your court level and playable for years. Sun exposure varies depending on your lot orientation; some properties in the Mars Hill area get afternoon shade from tree coverage, while others are fully exposed. That affects surface temperature and material choice. Most West Cobb residential yards have room for a 30×60 court or smaller variations, and we've worked with tight spaces too. HOA guidelines in some neighborhoods require specific court colors or setbacks from property lines, so we always pull those rules early. The newer construction means newer utilities—we always locate those before we dig. Cobb County's heat and humidity demand quality surface materials that won't crack or become slippery when wet; we don't recommend the cheapest options here because they fail faster in our climate.
Cobb County requires permits for most permanent court structures, especially if you're doing any grading or drainage work on newer construction lots. We handle the permitting process—it's part of our job. Depending on your specific neighborhood, you might also need HOA approval. We've worked with the Harrison High School area and Lost Mountain subdivisions enough to know what each one typically requires, so we're not starting from zero.
Cobb County's clay compacts and doesn't drain naturally like sandy soil would. We install a perforated base layer and often recommend French drain systems on West Cobb properties to keep water from sitting underneath your court. It costs a bit more upfront, but it prevents cracking and keeps your surface playable year-round in our wet Georgia climate.
We recommend premium polyurethane or acrylic systems for West Cobb because they expand and contract predictably in our summer heat without buckling or becoming dangerously slippery when wet. Budget surfaces fail faster here. The right material also reflects more heat, making the court actually usable during those 95-degree July afternoons.
Most newer construction yards around Lost Mountain and Mars Hill have enough space for a 30×60 court or a smaller custom size. We've also designed courts for tighter side yards. We come measure your space, check sun patterns, and show you realistic configurations that don't eat up your entire backyard or violate setback rules.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.