Turf Repair and Maintenance in Kingwood and the northeast Houston market addresses the full life cycle of artificial turf installations — not just new projects. Existing turf that was installed by another company, or that has been in place for several years and experienced the northeast Houston seasonal cycle, eventually develops issues that require professional attention. Seam failures are the most common problem we see on service calls in this market. Seams that were not glued with UV-stable adhesive, or that were not weighted during cure, open up during the thermal cycles that Kingwood's climate delivers — the combination of summer heat and winter cool periods stresses adhesive bonds that are not rated for the temperature range. We diagnose the specific failure type and repair with the appropriate adhesive and application method for the local climate profile. Infill migration is the second most common issue. In yards with significant slope, infill can shift toward low points over time, leaving some sections under-infilled and prone to fiber matting while other sections accumulate excess infill that makes the surface feel hard. We audit infill depth across the installation, redistribute existing infill where the total quantity is adequate, and add new infill where the volume has depleted. Edge failures — where the perimeter anchoring has pulled from the base due to root movement under the edge or from physical impact — are the third common category. In Kingwood's canopy neighborhoods, root growth under the edge perimeter over time can push the anchoring up and create a visible lifted edge. We address those failures by removing the edge, treating the root intrusion if present, and re-anchoring with appropriate fastening for the specific edge material. Post-Harvey and post-storm recovery work is also a category in the northeast Houston market. Properties that experienced significant flooding may have turf that was inundated for extended periods, and while artificial turf handles flooding better than natural grass, deep sediment deposits in the fiber after a flood event require professional cleaning and in some cases infill replacement. We assess post-flood turf for sediment accumulation, drainage system integrity, and base compaction status before recommending repair scope.