Keller occupies a geography that transitions between the Trinity River bottomlands and the Tarrant County uplands, and its residential fabric reflects that transitional character. The older sections near Keller Parkway carry mature post oak canopy and one- to two-acre lots with the irregular drainage patterns that come with age and settled subsoil. The newer custom-home sections along Bear Creek Parkway and the Pearson Road corridor are building out with the high-finish expectations of buyers who have chosen Keller specifically for its larger lot configurations and its distance from the dense suburban grid.
Artificial Grass of Flower Mound has worked across both contexts in Keller, and we bring the same deliberateness to each. A property with a two-acre lot and a paddock behind the main residence has a different program than a newer custom home on a graded one-acre lot with an outdoor kitchen and a sport court — but both deserve the same quality of site assessment, base preparation, and product specification.
In Keller's equestrian-adjacent sections — the acreage parcels along Florence Road and the older property corridors near the Johnson County line — we encounter homeowners whose outdoor program includes both a residential landscape and an operational equestrian component. The barn-aisle runner, the paddock turnout footing, and the round pen surround are legitimate applications for synthetic turf in these settings, and we approach them with the same technical care we bring to the residential work.
Keller's newer master-planned sections have ARB processes that vary in their technical specificity, and we have navigated the spectrum — from simple notice filings to detailed submission requirements with sample review and a maintenance protocol that the board retains on file. Our documentation preparation is thorough enough that revisions are rare.