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Your artificial turf in West Cobb takes a beating. Between the clay soil that shifts with Georgia's humidity swings and the newer construction homes popping up around Lost Mountain and Mars Hill, yards settle differently than they did five years ago. That means seams separate, infill compacts unevenly, and what looked perfect at install time starts showing wear faster than you'd expect. We've been fixing turf in this area long enough to know that West Cobb lawns aren't one-size-fits-all. The neighborhoods here—especially near Harrison High School and the West Cobb parks—have different sun exposures, drainage patterns, and HOA expectations. Some yards get hammered by afternoon sun; others stay shaded half the day. Some HOAs care deeply about seam visibility; others just want green. Repairs don't always mean ripping everything out and starting over. Sometimes it's re-securing a lifted edge. Sometimes it's topping off infill that's migrated or compacted. Sometimes you need a seam splice to hide a worn traffic line. We'll come out, look at what's actually happening in your yard, and tell you what makes sense—not just what makes us the most money. That's how we've built trust in West Cobb for years.
West Cobb's clay base is both a blessing and a challenge for artificial turf. That heavy clay holds water differently than sandy soil, which means drainage considerations matter more here. When we install or repair, we're always thinking about how water moves through your yard, especially during Georgia's wet springs. Sun patterns vary wildly depending on whether you're in the Lost Mountain area with mature trees, or in newer construction zones where landscaping is still young. Full-sun yards wear differently than shaded ones—infill can shift more, and UV exposure affects seams differently. During your repair assessment, we'll ask about your shade patterns because it changes how we approach the fix. Newer construction homes in West Cobb often have grading and settling still happening in year two or three. If your turf was installed as part of a builder package, you might see settling that causes the seams to lift or the base to become uneven. That's not a manufacturing defect; it's Cobb County clay doing what it does. HOA rules matter too. Some West Cobb neighborhoods have specific requirements about seam placement, infill color, or pile height. We know the common ones and can work within those guidelines without compromising the repair quality.
Yes. New construction and clay-heavy soil mean settling happens over a couple years. The seam didn't fail—your yard shifted. We can re-secure it and add some base reinforcement to prevent it lifting again. This is one of the most common repairs we do in this area.
Almost always. We can remove the compacted infill in that zone, brush out the pile to restore its stand, and add fresh infill. Depending on wear depth, this might extend another 5–7 years of use in that spot before you'd need broader replacement.
Depends on the scope. A seam repair or infill top-off takes 2–4 hours. Larger patches or multiple areas might take a day. We're 12 minutes from the West Cobb area, so scheduling flexibility is easier than you might think.
Some do, some don't. A few neighborhoods care about seam visibility or infill type. We'll ask about your HOA rules during the quote so we're not blindsiding you with work that violates them. Most repairs don't trigger HOA review, but it's worth confirming upfront.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.