Artificial turf installation near Lewisville Lake

The Lake Cities Turf Specialist

Artificial Turf of Lewisville is built for this community—the lake recreation lifestyle, the Old Town heritage, and the Lewisville ISD families who need their outdoor spaces to work without requiring work.

Rooted in the Lewisville Lake Community

Lewisville Lake has shaped this part of North Texas in ways that go well beyond recreation. The lake corridor—Lewisville, Hickory Creek, Lake Dallas, Corinth, Highland Village, The Colony—developed a distinct identity as a place where outdoor living is central to the point of being here. Families choose the Lake Cities because of Lewisville Lake Park, Stewart Creek Park, Pilot Knoll, and Hidden Cove. They stay because of Lewisville ISD, the small-city character that Old Town Lewisville preserves along College Street and the historic district, and the community that forms around that combination of natural recreation and genuine neighborhood life.

Artificial Turf of Lewisville grew out of that context. Our work is concentrated in the communities where the outdoor lifestyle is most active—where backyards are genuinely used, not just maintained—and where natural grass in North Texas clay soil consistently fails to keep pace with how families actually live. The Lewisville ISD household running between Marcus and Lewisville High activities six days a week, the Highland Village homeowner whose lake-view backyard needs to look sharp from the water as well as the deck, the Castle Hills family whose dogs and kids use the yard hard every day—these are the properties and the people we built this company around serving.

Old Town Lewisville is one of our reference points in more than a geographic sense. The preservation instinct that keeps the College Street historic district intact—the recognition that quality built well lasts, and that the character of a place is worth protecting—reflects the approach we bring to every installation. We do not cut corners on base construction because the finished surface looks fine at installation. We engineer drainage for what North Texas weather actually delivers, not for average conditions. We specify products for the sun exposure and use patterns of the actual property, not for a generic residential profile. Quality that holds up is the only quality that matters in a 15-to-20-year investment.

Professional artificial turf installation in the Lewisville Lake area
Lewisville Lake area backyard turf project

Why the Lake Cities Landscape Is Different

The technical challenges of artificial turf installation in the Lewisville Lake region are specific enough that they deserve a specialist, not a generalist. The clay soil common throughout Denton County—particularly the Blackland Prairie formation that underlies much of Lewisville, Corinth, Hickory Creek, and the communities to the north—is expansive. It swells with moisture and contracts hard during drought cycles. That movement creates sub-base instability that poorly engineered turf installations do not survive well. Drainage aggregate depth and compaction specifications that work in sandy DFW soil can fail completely in Lewisville Lake watershed clay.

UV exposure in North Texas is genuinely intense. The combination of high summer temperatures, direct sun hours, and the reflective conditions common on open south- and west-facing lots in communities like Garden Ridge, Valley Ridge, and The Colony demands UV-stabilized fiber specifications that are significantly more demanding than what a Pacific Northwest or upper Midwest installation requires. Products that are adequate in milder climates fade and degrade prematurely in a Lewisville August.

And the HOA and community standards of master-planned communities—Castle Hills, Lantana, The Tribute in The Colony, communities throughout Highland Village—create specific compliance requirements that need to be addressed in product selection and installation approach before work begins, not discovered after an HOA violation notice arrives. We know these requirements because we work in these communities regularly.

How We Approach Every Installation

Every Artificial Turf of Lewisville installation starts with a site visit that we treat as a diagnostic, not a formality. We walk the property with genuine attention to the conditions that will determine performance: soil type and drainage gradient, shade coverage from existing trees and structures, sun exposure hours by zone, evidence of existing drainage problems, HOA and deed restriction requirements, and how the household actually uses the outdoor space. A Lewisville ISD family in Castle Hills with two large dogs and three children needs a different installation than a Highland Village couple who want a formal front lawn that photographs well from the street. We design to the actual use case, not to a default specification.

Base construction is where most artificial turf installations either succeed or fail for the long term, and it is the phase that homeowners least often see or ask about. The aggregate depth, compaction method, drainage membrane specification, and perimeter anchor approach are determined entirely by the site conditions we assess—not by what is fastest or cheapest to install. We do not apply a single base design to every project. A sloped Highland Village lakeside lot needs different drainage engineering than a flat Castle Hills backyard. A heavy-pet household in Corinth needs drainage infrastructure that a decorative commercial installation does not. We match the base to the demand.

Installation execution—turf panel layout, seaming, infill distribution, perimeter finishing—receives the same attention to detail that base construction does. Seams that are visible at installation become more visible over time, not less. Perimeter edges that are not anchored correctly create the lifting and curling that makes turf look like turf rather than lawn. Infill distributed unevenly affects both drainage performance and the tactile feel underfoot. We work carefully through every phase because the shortcuts taken during installation show up in year three or four, not year one.

Site-Specific Engineering

Drainage base design calibrated for your actual soil conditions and topography—not a generic spec applied uniformly across all projects.

Lake Cities Climate Expertise

Products and installation methods appropriate for Lewisville Lake UV intensity, North Texas clay drainage challenges, and the full seasonal cycle.

Direct, Documented Process

Clear project documentation, straightforward communication at every phase, and workmanship that holds up through the full lifecycle of your investment.

Serving Every Community in the Lake Cities Corridor

Our work extends from the Old Town Lewisville historic district—where craftsman bungalows on College Street have yards that require shade-tolerant products and careful organic load management from mature oak canopy—to the expansive estate properties of Double Oak and Argyle, where Blackland Prairie clay and large-lot complexity create the most technically demanding installations in the region.

The DCTA A-train corridor that runs through Lewisville into Denton means our commercial clients include the business parks and retail centers that serve commuters and residents along the SH-121 Business and FM 407 corridors. The Grandscape development in The Colony, with its Nebraska Furniture Mart and entertainment district, brings commercial property owners who need exterior appearance that matches the ambition of the district. The Toyota of Lewisville Music Factory and entertainment venues along the SH-121 corridor draw the kind of visibility that makes commercial exterior maintenance a real business consideration.

From Flower Mound\'s Bridlewood equestrian community to The Tribute golf neighborhood in The Colony, from Highland Village lakefront homes to Krum\'s rural north Denton County acreage—we understand the conditions, character, and expectations of each community we serve because we have worked in them and around the lake that connects them.

The Lewisville ISD Family Standard

Lewisville ISD is consistently one of the highest-rated large school districts in North Texas—a reputation that draws families who are serious about their children\'s environment and who hold high expectations for every dimension of their community. The families we serve most frequently are Lewisville ISD households: parents running between Marcus High School activities and Lewisville High sports, households where the backyard is a genuine gathering place for Lewisville Lake weekends, and dog owners whose pets are as active as their children.

For these households, artificial turf is not a luxury—it is a practical answer to a real problem. Natural grass in Denton County clay cannot withstand the combination of active kids, active pets, North Texas drought, and a family schedule that leaves no time for lawn maintenance. Artificial Turf of Lewisville installs the system that handles all of it: safe for kids, durable for dogs, beautiful year-round, and completely off the maintenance to-do list so weekends belong to the lake and the family, not the lawn.

That is the standard we work toward on every project—residential or commercial, from an Old Town cottage yard to a Castle Hills estate to a Highland Village lakefront property. The Lewisville Lake community deserves outdoor spaces that match its character, and Artificial Turf of Lewisville is the team built to deliver them.

Ready to Talk Through Your Project?

Tell us about your property—Old Town yard, Castle Hills backyard, Highland Village lakefront, or any Lake Cities address. We will assess your conditions, walk through your options, and give you a clear, honest picture of what a quality installation looks like for your specific situation.