Richland Hills is a small, dense community entirely surrounded by North Richland Hills — the original Richland Hills that predates the larger city that grew around it. This geographic reality means Artificial Turf of North Richland Hills serves Richland Hills as true neighboring territory, with the same crews, the same material specifications, and the same drainage-focused installation standards we apply in the NRH neighborhoods directly adjacent. Richland Hills has one of the tightest lot configurations in the Mid-Cities. Properties here are compact, streets are close, and the community has the dense, established character that comes from a city that reached its physical limits decades ago and has been owner-occupied since. The drainage conditions in Richland Hills mirror the clay-subgrade, mature-drainage-infrastructure profile of adjacent NRH neighborhoods — Forest Glenn and Holiday North are directly across the border, and the soil and drainage characteristics cross city lines seamlessly. The homeowners in Richland Hills tend to be long-term residents — people who chose this community for its location, its school access, and its established neighborhood character, and have stayed. Many of these households are on Birdville ISD attendance zones along with their NRH neighbors. The outdoor living expectations here are practical and genuine: families want yards that are usable and maintained without consuming the limited free time that working households actually have. Artificial turf makes particular sense in Richland Hills because the lot sizes here are small enough that irrigation and mowing overhead is disproportionately high relative to the turf area it covers. Paying a landscape crew or running an irrigation system to maintain 1,500 square feet of front and back yard is a different value calculation than doing the same on a 5,000 square foot suburban lot. When we look at the return on investment for Richland Hills homeowners specifically, the math typically favors turf replacement more clearly than it does for larger-lot properties in the surrounding communities.