Artificial Turf of Carrollton serves projects across all of Carrollton's distinct neighborhoods and zip codes.
Old Downtown Carrollton — the historic Reinhardt area, the bungalows on Jackson Road and Belt Line, the commercial streets that predated the DFW Connector — is some of the oldest residential land in the city. Clay soil, mature trees, and established drainage patterns create specific installation requirements. We address them.
Riverchase, in the western part of Carrollton, sits partly in Denton County and borders Coppell. Families here are often drawn by the school options and the suburban character. Yards in Riverchase tend to be larger than the city average, and multi-zone turf installations — front yard, back yard, and side runs — are common.
The Hebron corridor and Frankford area represent Carrollton's interface with Plano and the broader north DFW premium market. Properties here often seek turf as a premium landscaping upgrade consistent with the neighborhood tier. Installation quality and product specification matter more here, and we deliver accordingly.
The Trinity Mills and Royal Lane corridor is the heart of Carrollton's Korean-American community — Korean grocery stores, restaurants, churches, and multi-generational households within a few blocks of each other. This community has specific preferences about their outdoor spaces: clean, functional, low-maintenance, and appropriate for both daily family use and occasional larger gatherings.
Plum Creek and McCoy Creek neighborhoods in the interior of Carrollton deal with drainage challenges from the creek systems' clay-heavy soils and slow-draining low zones. Turf in these areas requires specific sub-base and drainage design — not a generic install.
We serve all of these neighborhoods, and we account for their specific conditions on every project we take.