Most of the residential properties Artificial Turf of Pearland works on are not new construction. They are older east-side Pearland lots in tracts like Sherwood, Country Place, Westwood, and Westside — 1970s and 1980s homes on clay-and-sandy-loam lots with mature tree canopy, original drainage infrastructure, and families who have been in the same house long enough to know every flaw in the lawn. They are Alvin lots with wide footprints on Brazoria County clay. They are South Houston brick ranches with Houston black clay and narrow alley access. They are Friendswood west homes near Clear Creek drainage tributaries that flood the back yard for 48 hours after a normal spring rain.
Residential turf installation at Artificial Turf of Pearland starts with the property as it actually is, not as a standard installation template would prefer it to be. That means a site visit before any scope is written, a drainage path assessment before any base specification is set, and a scheduling conversation that accounts for the household's work pattern — including night shifts, rotating schedules, and TMC commuter hours — before a start date is confirmed.
The goal is a finished turf surface that the homeowner can describe in one sentence to a neighbor: it looks the same in January as it does in July, it drains after rain, and I do not mow it. That is the outcome we build toward on every residential project in our Pearland-area coverage zone.