ABOUT ARTIFICIAL TURF OF LITTLE ELM

Built on the north shore of Lake Lewisville. Serving the fastest-growing corridor in North Texas — from Sunset Pointe to Wildridge, Paloma Creek to Prosper, and every community along the Hwy 380 axis.

WHO WE ARE AND WHERE WE WORK

Artificial Turf of Little Elm was established in and for one of the most specific residential environments in Texas: the north shore of Lake Lewisville, where Denton County clay soils, lakeshore drainage dynamics, and one of the fastest-growing master-planned residential corridors in the country create a landscape context that generic turf contractors aren't built to handle well. We are.

Little Elm's communities — Sunset Pointe, Lakeside, Paloma Creek, Wildridge, Heritage Park, Stardust Ranch, Riviera — have added tens of thousands of households over the past decade and a half. The families who moved here came from across the DFW metro and from out of state, drawn by the lake access, the Lewisville ISD and Denton ISD school options, the price point relative to Frisco and Prosper, and the sense of being in a community still in formation. Indian, Hispanic, Black, Asian, and Anglo families have made Little Elm one of the most ethnically diverse fast-growth communities in North Texas. We serve all of them, and we approach each property with the specific knowledge that their address along the Lake Lewisville north shore requires.

Our service area extends beyond Little Elm along the corridors that define this region's growth: west to Frisco's north edge along the Dallas North Tollway extension, east to McKinney and The Colony along the Lewisville Lake southern shore, north through Denton and Aubrey's Providence Village corridor, and south through Lewisville, Carrollton, and Plano. These aren't markets we serve incidentally — they share the same Denton and Collin County clay geology, the same drainage dynamics, and in many cases the same HOA governance patterns that define how we approach every installation.

Artificial Turf of Little Elm — Professional Installation Team

WHAT MAKES THIS REGION SPECIFIC — AND WHY IT MATTERS

The Lake Lewisville north shore creates installation conditions that contractors without direct experience here routinely underestimate. The lake sits at an elevation that influences groundwater levels in the lower sections of Little Elm and The Colony — lower-elevation lots near the shoreline face saturation dynamics after heavy rain events that higher-ground properties don't. The Denton County clay soils throughout this region are expansive, meaning they swell measurably when wet and contract when dry. A base that's adequate on a well-drained inland lot will develop surface irregularities and seam separation on a lake-adjacent property where the clay is moving through its cycle twice a year.

We assess every property's drainage before recommending anything. We map water flow paths, identify where water accumulates and where it exits, evaluate how close the property sits to Lewisville Lake's drainage influence, and design a base system that matches the actual conditions on your specific lot — not a standard formula applied identically to every project. For properties where standard base drainage is insufficient, we integrate French drains, channel drains, or catch basin systems as part of the same installation. For properties on higher ground with simpler drainage paths, we don't oversell engineering that isn't needed.

The master-planned community character of Little Elm and the surrounding growth corridor adds another layer of specificity. Sunset Pointe, Paloma Creek, Wildridge, Lakeside, Heritage Park — these communities carry HOA governing documents that define acceptable landscaping specifications in detail. We know what these communities' architectural review committees require because we've worked through their approval processes. We prepare the product specification sheets, blade height and color documentation, and installation method descriptions that get approvals on the first submission. Our installations are built to hold that compliance for years, not just to pass initial inspection.

HOW WE WORK

Every engagement starts with an honest site assessment. We don't quote from satellite images or apply price-per-square-foot formulas before we've walked your property and understood what it actually needs. The consultation is free, the assessment is site-specific, and the proposal you receive itemizes what you're paying for and why.

1

Site-Specific Base Engineering

Your lot's elevation, proximity to Lake Lewisville, soil composition, and drainage path determine what base your installation needs. We design for your site, not for an average site.

2

Honest Product Matching

Front yards in HOA communities need different blade profiles than backyard pet runs. Putting greens need different products than play areas. We recommend appropriately for each application.

3

HOA Documentation Support

We prepare the product specifications and installation documentation your HOA architectural committee requires. We know what Sunset Pointe, Paloma Creek, Wildridge, and similar communities need to see.

4

Transparent Quoting

Our proposals are itemized. You see material costs, base preparation costs, labor, and any specialty drainage work as separate line items — so adjustments to scope are clear and calculable.

THE COMMUNITY WE SERVE

Little Elm's growth has created one of the most genuinely diverse communities in North Texas — and we mean that in the full sense. The families we serve include Indian households hosting large gatherings in Paloma Creek backyards, Hispanic families with kids running constant laps in Wildridge yards, Black homeowners building the outdoor entertaining spaces they've planned since before the move, Asian families with specific HOA compliance requirements in Heritage Park, and longtime Anglo residents watching their 15-year-old neighborhoods mature around them. Every one of these households has a different set of priorities for their outdoor space. We ask about how you use your yard before we recommend anything.

The Hwy 380 corridor connects this community — Little Elm to Frisco to Aubrey to Providence Village to Prosper to the Colony — in ways that go beyond geography. Families move along this corridor as housing prices shift, school district boundaries evolve, and new master-planned developments offer the right combination of features at the right time. We follow that corridor with the same depth of service. Whether you're in a first home in The Colony or an established property in Highland Village, you get the same quality of assessment, the same level of installation precision, and the same honest conversation about what your project actually requires.

Lake Lewisville is at the center of it. The fishing, the boating, the Little Elm Park beach access, the trail systems that ring the lake — these are part of why people chose this part of North Texas. They didn't relocate to the north shore to spend their weekends managing a lawn. Artificial Turf of Little Elm exists to return that time to the families we serve. The outdoor space should work for you, not demand from you. That's the straightforward premise behind everything we do.

OUR SERVICE AREA

From Lake Lewisville's north shore through the Hwy 380 corridor and across Denton and Collin County — we serve the communities that define this growth region.

READY TO TALK ABOUT YOUR PROPERTY?

Free consultations, site-specific assessments, written proposals with no obligation. We serve Little Elm and the full Lake Lewisville north shore corridor — contact us to schedule.