Local Overview
Artificial Turf of Richmond serves Sealy with Brazos River bottomland engineering matched to Austin County's heavy clay soils, flat agricultural drainage patterns, and a flood history written by the river that runs through the heart of this community.
Local Challenges
Sealy installations face the most intensive Brazos bottomland soil conditions in our service territory, flat agricultural drainage terrain with sheet flow patterns, Harvey-documented flood history at the western end of the Brazos corridor, and the limited urban storm drainage infrastructure that makes surface water management entirely dependent on site-level engineering.
Service Solutions
We address those conditions through maximum-depth base aggregate preparation for clay-soil conditions, perforated drainage channels sized for sheet flow volumes, perimeter berm specification that accounts for agricultural off-site drainage, and turf product selection based on Sealy's specific heat load and drainage requirements.
Project Benefits
Sealy property owners gain a turf surface that eliminates the mud, standing water, and slow-draining clay-soil problems that make natural grass maintenance particularly difficult in Austin County bottomland, and a surface that holds its appearance through the extended summer dry periods that follow the Brazos corridor's wet season.
Process Notes
Each Sealy project follows soil assessment specific to bottomland clay conditions, drainage direction and sheet flow mapping, base excavation to full clay-compensation depth, aggregate installation with drainage channels, turf placement, infill calibration, and closeout review.
Local Coverage
Sealy service routes from our Richmond base westward along the I-10 corridor through Brookshire and Simonton, covering the full length of the Brazos corridor within our service territory.