Field notes from Conyers installs
Conyers sorts into two construction stories, and knowing which one you are standing in changes the approach. Olde Town Conyers, the historic core around Center Street, is early-1900s building: wood-frame cottages and brick storefronts with plaster-and-lath interior walls and the occasional masonry chimney. Our crew treats these as careful jobs: low-impact drilling, staged pilot holes, dust containment, and anchor placement that respects the original plaster. Cutting plaster to bury cables creates repaint problems, so we keep wiring in paintable raceways here.
The 1990s and 2000s subdivisions out toward Lakeview and the Georgia International Horse Park are a different animal: brick veneer over wood stud with drywall inside. These mount fast. A stud finder locates the framing, the bracket lands on two studs with lag bolts, and SnapToggle anchors handle any spot where a stud does not line up. Brick-veneer accent walls and fireplace surrounds get a hammer drill and Tapcon.
Conyers sits on Georgia red clay with hot, humid summers, so any attic or in-wall cable run uses HDMI rated for that environment. Whether the wall is 1905 plaster or 2005 drywall, the Conyers TV goes up level, anchored to something solid, and tested before we pack up.
TV mounting prices in Conyers
Conyers TV mounting starts at $149 (basic up to 54”), $199 (large 55-69”), $259 (XL 70-79”), $319 (XXL 80-inch+). Cable concealment $119/TV. Newer brick-veneer and drywall subdivision homes carry no surcharge, and historic Olde Town plaster-and-lath or masonry work takes longer but is still priced by TV size.
Helpful guides before your Conyers install
How Express Mounting covers Conyers
Alex Crabinsky opened Express Mounting in Atlanta in 2015, building up 7,874 documented installs and 750+ five-star reviews over the years. Conyers jobs run with our local Atlanta crew, who carry the full hardware kit, work off the same install checklist, and back every job with the same 100% satisfaction guarantee. They already know how Olde Town plaster-and-lath behaves and how the brick-veneer subdivisions near the Horse Park frame up, so your Conyers TV goes on the wall right the first time.