Euless sits at the geographic center of the Mid-Cities corridor, sharing city limits with Hurst and Bedford in the HEB community and connecting east to Irving and west to Fort Worth through the SH-183 and SH-121 infrastructure. Artificial Turf of North Richland Hills serves Euless as a natural extension of our Mid-Cities territory, bringing the same drainage-first installation approach we apply in NRH and Haltom City to a community with its own distinct residential character. Euless has one of the more diverse household profiles in the Mid-Cities corridor — multigenerational families, active young households with children in HEB ISD schools, and established long-term residents who bought here decades ago and have watched the community grow around them. That diversity means we serve a wide range of property configurations and use patterns. Some clients want a full-yard transformation for maximum curb appeal and minimum maintenance. Others want a targeted backyard install for the kids and dogs, keeping some natural planting areas in place. We size each project to what actually makes sense for the property and the household. The soil in Euless carries the clay characteristics common throughout Tarrant County, and the drainage planning is as important here as anywhere else in our service area. The DFW International Airport proximity to the north affects some properties with micro-drainage patterns from the extensive impervious cover nearby, and we account for local drainage behavior in our base specifications. A generic install spec doesn't account for those conditions; our site assessments do. Euless families on HEB ISD school schedules — with kids at Euless Junior High, Trinity High School, or one of the HEB elementary campuses — are exactly the type of household that benefits most from low-maintenance outdoor space. The activity load of a school-year schedule leaves little time for lawn care. Artificial turf clears that item from the list completely.