Lewisville occupies a transitional geography — east of the Cross Timbers proper but connected to Flower Mound, Highland Village, and Copper Canyon communities whose homeowners share the same design expectations and, increasingly, the same architectural review board culture. The properties along Lewisville Lake's shoreline and in the established neighborhoods flanking the FM 407 corridor present their own set of installation considerations: mature tree canopy, clay-loam soils that behave differently from the sandy profiles in Collin County, and HOA covenants that range from purely aesthetic to technically detailed.
Artificial Grass of Flower Mound has completed installations across Lewisville's residential corridors, and our approach here begins the same way it does everywhere we work — with a walk of the property before we discuss a single product or price. A homeowner in The Highlands subdivision near the lake asked us to address a sloped backyard that had defeated three natural grass seedings in as many years. The grade change was modest — perhaps eight percent — but the subsoil drainage was channeling toward the foundation rather than away from it, and no amount of seed was going to solve that. We regraded the base profile, installed a perforated drainage collection system, and specified TigerTurf Coronado in a 54-ounce face weight that holds its blade profile through Lewisville's typical hail corridor spring season.
That project took four days. The homeowner's ARB required a simple written notice rather than a formal submission, which we prepared and filed on their behalf. The resulting installation has handled two significant hail events and has not shown the fiber collapse that lighter-weight products routinely exhibit after impact.
In Lewisville's older established neighborhoods — the custom-built sections near Old Orchard Road and the mature streetscapes approaching the lake — the work is often more about proportions than about any single technical challenge. A front elevation needs to read correctly from the street, which means the turf margin needs to align with the existing bed edges, the blade height needs to complement the hardscape rather than fight it, and the color register needs to be chosen relative to the surrounding context in late summer, not just in the spring photography that most synthetic turf companies rely on for their portfolio.
We also serve the multi-acre properties at the Lewisville-Flower Mound boundary — homes that face Flower Mound's address conventions but carry Lewisville school district assignments and sit on lots large enough to include a detached workshop, a sport court, and a paddock-scale open space. For those properties, we bring the same equestrian and large-lot expertise that defines our Flower Mound work.