Synthetic Turf Install in Padre Hills, Corpus Christi TX
Padre Hills (ZIP 78411) sits within the Corpus Christi TX service area. Established residential neighborhood with mature trees and mixed slab and pier-and-beam home stock. Adjacent to Oso Bay so the area sees humid bay air and storm-uplift exposure during named systems.
Long-tenured homeowner base with regular service contracts and standing relationships. Quick drive to most central Corpus Christi shops.
For synthetic turf install, the service area covers roughly 40 miles from central Corpus Christi.
Common reasons to call
- A lawn that will not grow well because of shade, heavy foot traffic, or poor soil
- Wanting to stop mowing, watering, and paying for a sprinkler system every month
- Pet owners who are tired of mud, brown urine spots, and dogs digging holes
- A backyard putting green or a play area that needs a soft, even surface
- Sandy or salty coastal soil that keeps killing new grass
- Wanting a green yard year round even during a South Texas dry spell or watering restriction
- Fixing a patchy, weedy lawn without starting over with new sod every year
Typical work
- Small front yard, side yard, or a single pet run
- Full backyard turf install with a base, drainage, and edging
- Putting green or golf practice area with cups and contours
- Rooftop, patio, balcony, or pool surround turf on a hard surface
- Play area or daycare surface with added padding underneath
- Commercial entrance, median, or storefront green space
Typical turnaround
Most home yards are done in one to three days once the crew starts. Bigger yards, putting greens, or jobs that need extra grading and drainage can take a week or more. Add lead time for the turf to be ordered and delivered.
Materials and equipment
- Synthetic turf rolls (polyethylene or nylon blades)
- Crushed rock or decomposed granite base material
- Weed barrier fabric
- Drainage layer or shock pad where needed
- Infill such as silica sand or coated sand for pet areas
- Bender board, timber, or concrete edging
- Landscape staples, nails, and seaming tape or glue
- Compactor and grading tools for the base
Job sizes
Minor
A small patch, a pet potty spot, or a single narrow side yard on ground that is already fairly flat and easy to reach.
Standard
A typical front or back yard that needs the old grass removed, a fresh rock base built and compacted, drainage handled, and turf seamed and edged.
Major
A large yard, a full property, or a job with grading, added drainage, retaining edges, or a putting green with cups and rolling contours.
Replacement
Pulling up worn out or badly installed turf, fixing the base and drainage underneath, and laying new turf with fresh infill.
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓A good pro removes the old grass and builds a compacted rock base, because turf laid over soft or uneven ground will sink, ripple, and hold water.
- ✓Drainage is planned before the turf goes down, which matters in flat, rainy coastal yards where water likes to pool.
- ✓Seams are lined up by blade direction and fastened well so they stay hidden and do not lift over time.
- ✓The right infill is chosen for the use, with pet friendly and cooling options where they make sense.
- ✓A trustworthy installer gives a written warranty on both the turf material and their workmanship.
- ✓They should carry general liability insurance and be glad to show photos of local jobs a year or two later.
- ✓A careful pro asks about pets, kids, shade, and the surface underneath before quoting, since those change the base and turf choice.
Turf manufacturer installer certification or training, general liability insurance, workers compensation coverage, a written material and workmanship warranty, and years of documented local install photos.
Common questions
How long does synthetic turf last in South Texas heat and sun?
Good turf laid over a solid base usually lasts many years of normal use. Strong sun and heat are the hardest test down here, so ask which turf lines the pro trusts for coastal sun and what the manufacturer warranty covers.
Does fake grass get too hot to walk on?
It can get warm in direct summer sun, warmer than real grass. Lighter blade colors, some shade, and a quick rinse with the hose all help. Ask the pro about cooling infill options if kids or pets will use it barefoot.
Is it good for dogs, and does it smell?
Yes, many people install it just for dogs. The key is real drainage and a pet friendly infill so urine rinses through instead of sitting. Solid waste is picked up and the area is hosed off. Ask how the base is built for pet areas.
How does the water drain, especially with our heavy rains?
Turf has holes in the backing and sits on a compacted rock base that lets water pass through. A good installer grades the ground and plans where water goes so it does not pool. This matters a lot in our flat, wet coastal yards, so ask how they handle drainage.
Do I still have to do any yard work?
Much less. No mowing, no watering, and no fertilizer. You will still rinse it now and then, brush the blades up in high traffic spots, and clear off leaves. It is low upkeep, not zero upkeep.
Will an HOA or the city let me put in turf?
Many do, but some HOAs have rules about how much of a yard can be artificial or how it looks from the street. Check your HOA rules first, and ask the city about a permit if the job changes drainage or covers a large area.
What should I ask before hiring someone?
Ask about the base depth and material, how they handle drainage, whether seams are glued and nailed, what infill they use, the turf and labor warranty, and whether they carry liability insurance. Ask to see photos of local yards a year or two after install.
Can turf go over concrete, a patio, or a rooftop?
Yes. On a hard surface the crew uses a shock pad or a drainage layer and glues or fastens the turf down instead of building a rock base. Tell the pro up front what surface it is going on so they plan the right setup.