Houston's southwest quadrant is where the Fort Bend County commuter network meets the Houston city limit, creating a dense residential and commercial band along Beltway 8 Southwest between Highway 6 and Highway 90A. The neighborhoods here — Meyerland, Westbury, Braeswood, Fondren Southwest, and the communities along Hillcroft and Beechnut — share characteristics with our core Missouri City and Stafford service area: Harris County clay drainage, mature residential landscape, and homeowners whose commutes put them on the Southwest Freeway, Beltway 8, or Highway 6 most weekday mornings. Artificial Turf of Missouri City routes southwest Houston work from our Missouri City base along these same corridors, which means our crews and project coordinators are already traveling the route that Meyerland and Westbury homeowners travel to work every day. We understand the Southwest Houston drainage context — Brays Bayou and its tributaries create the dominant drainage pattern through this area, with flooding history that has shaped how homeowners think about yard drainage far more actively than the typical suburban market. The 2017 flooding events that affected Meyerland, Bellaire, and adjacent neighborhoods fundamentally changed the conversation about drainage in southwest Houston. When homeowners in these areas ask about artificial turf, drainage performance is often the first question — not appearance, not maintenance cost, but whether the surface and base system will help manage the water that comes through their property during a major Brays Bayou event. We approach those conversations honestly: turf drainage engineering manages surface water behavior, but it works within the capacity of the property's existing drainage infrastructure. We design the base to move water as efficiently as possible toward the outlets the property has, and we are transparent about what that means for different flooding scenarios.