Conroe is the northern anchor of Artificial Grass of Kingwood's service territory and one of the fastest-growing cities in Montgomery County. The city's expansion has created a patchwork of older established residential neighborhoods near the city center with mature trees and developed clay profiles, alongside significant new development areas in the southeast and southwest quadrants where construction soils and altered drainage grades create different baseline conditions. Lake Conroe and its watershed add a distinctive planning dimension to north Conroe installations — properties in the communities along the lake's southern and eastern shorelines, including the Montgomery and Panorama Village areas, have drainage engineering requirements tied to the lake's watershed position that parallel what we manage for Lake Houston properties in our primary Kingwood zone. Conroe's soil profile transitions across the city. The older sections near downtown Conroe and the I-45 corridor have heavy Beaumont-variant clay with the same shrink-swell behavior we manage in Humble and Spring. Moving north and west toward the Lake Conroe shoreline, the soil shifts to a lighter loam with sand mixed in from the lakebed deposit influence — that profile drains better but requires different aggregate sizing and compaction density than the downtown clay. Properties in Conroe's growth corridors to the south and southeast, particularly those in the new developments along the TX-105 and FM 3083 belts, often have construction-graded soils similar to what we encounter in Porter and New Caney — land that was cleared and graded during subdivision development and has not yet developed the soil structure needed for predictable drainage. Conroe ISD and Montgomery ISD school zones both overlap with our Conroe service area. We handle playground and athletic turf for school campuses in both districts and coordinate residential summer installation scheduling around both ISD academic calendars.