A drainage problem in Prosper can sneak up on you. One week the yard looks fine. Then a hard rain comes through and the same low spot fills up again. The side yard stays muddy. Mulch floats out of the bed. Water sits near the house longer than it should.
That kind of problem usually does not fix itself.
Andy’s Sprinkler, Drainage & Lighting installs French drain systems in Prosper, TX for homeowners who need a better way to move water out of soggy areas. Some yards need help with roof runoff. Others have low spots, clay soil, tight side yards, or drainage that was never planned well from the start.
We look at the full property before recommending anything. Downspouts, slope, soil, patios, walkways, driveways, fences, beds, and discharge locations all matter.
A French drain is an underground drainage system that collects excess water and moves it away from areas that stay too wet. It is often used for soggy lawns, muddy side yards, low spots, foundation drainage, and landscape beds that wash out after storms.
Most French drains include a trench, gravel or drainage aggregate, and a perforated pipe. Water moves through the gravel, enters the pipe, and travels through the drain line to a discharge point.
Some Prosper yards need more than a basic drain line. Depending on the property, the system may include catch basins, filter fabric, downspout tie-ins, channel drains, pop-up emitters, regrading, or a sump system.
A French drain gives water an easier path below the surface. Instead of sitting in the grass or pushing back toward the house, water enters the gravel trench and flows through the pipe.
The details matter. The system needs the right depth, slope, pipe placement, and outlet. If the discharge point is wrong, the water can end up creating another wet area. Andy’s checks the site carefully before deciding how the drain should be built.
You may need a French drain if water stands in your yard after rain or if one area stays soggy while the rest of the lawn dries out.
Other signs include muddy side yards, water pooling near the foundation, mulch washing out of beds, soil erosion, downspout runoff collecting near the home, or water sitting around patios, walkways, driveways, retaining walls, and pool decks.
If part of the yard is hard to mow, hard to walk through, or always messy after storms, drainage is probably part of the issue.
Prosper homes can deal with drainage problems from fast North Texas storms, clay soil, low yard areas, roof runoff, and water coming from driveways, patios, sidewalks, or neighboring lots.
Clay soil can hold water near the surface. During dry stretches, it can become hard and compacted, so stormwater runs across the lawn instead of soaking in evenly. That is when low spots fill up and water can sit too close to the home.
Prosper properties may also have newer landscaping, patios, pools, fences, and hardscape areas that change how water moves. A French drain can help collect that water and send it somewhere better.
A French drain can help redirect water away from foundation edges, slab areas, and low spots close to the house.
If part of the lawn stays muddy after storms, a French drain can help it dry out more normally and make the yard easier to maintain.
Runoff can wash away soil, mulch, gravel, and plant material. A drainage system helps guide water before it damages beds and lawn edges.
Grass, shrubs, and plant beds can struggle when the soil stays too wet. Better drainage helps reduce oversaturation around roots.
Wet ground can attract mosquitoes and make the yard less comfortable. A drainage system can help reduce those repeat damp spots.
Andy’s installs French drains and related yard drainage systems based on the layout of the property. Some yards need a simple drain line. Others need a mix of drainage features to handle roof runoff, surface water, and low areas.
A standard French drain is often used for shallow drainage problems, soggy grass, wet side yards, and landscape beds that hold water after rain.
A deeper system may be needed when water moves below the surface, when shallow drainage is not enough, or when moisture near the foundation is part of the concern.
Foundation and perimeter drains help manage water near the home, crawl space areas where applicable, retaining walls, and structural edges.
Older French drains can clog, settle, collapse, or stop draining correctly. If your existing system is not keeping the yard dry, Andy’s can inspect it and recommend cleaning, repair, replacement, or redesign.
Downspouts can dump a lot of roof water into one small area. If that water lands near the foundation or a low bed, Andy’s can tie downspouts into underground drainage when the layout allows it.
Some Prosper yards need more than a French drain. Andy’s may recommend catch basins, channel drains, dry wells, pop-up emitters, regrading, sump systems, or other stormwater drainage features.
We walk the property and look at where the water comes from and where it collects. We check slope, low spots, soil, downspouts, hardscapes, beds, retaining walls, and possible outlet locations.
After the inspection, we design the system. That includes the drain route, trench depth, pipe type, gravel or drainage aggregate, discharge location, and any needed tie-ins or add-ons.
Installation may include trenching, gravel, perforated pipe, filter fabric, catch basins, downspout connections, outlets, and cleanup. We work around lawns, beds, fences, patios, and hardscapes as carefully as possible.
Once the work is complete, we review the system with you. We explain what was installed, where the water should move, and what to keep clear so the drainage system keeps working.
A standard French drain usually handles shallow soggy areas. A deep French drain may be better for subsurface water, foundation-area drainage, limited slope, or heavier water movement.
French drains are better for soggy soil and subsurface water. Channel drains are better for surface water crossing patios, driveways, walkways, and pool decks.
A French drain relies on gravity where the yard allows it. A sump pump is used when water has to be collected in a basin and pumped away.
Andy’s works on drainage problems across North Texas, including yards with clay soil, slope issues, downspout runoff, soggy side yards, low areas, and water near foundations.
Our team brings local drainage experience, residential and light commercial know-how, quality materials, clean work areas, and clear communication. We focus on finding the source of the drainage problem and building a system that fits the property.
Andy’s helps with yard flooding, standing water, soggy side yards, water pooling near foundations, overflowing downspouts, driveway runoff, patio drainage, pool deck drainage, retaining wall drainage, landscape bed washout, crawl space moisture where applicable, and commercial drainage concerns.
Andy’s serves Prosper and nearby North Texas communities, including:
Celina, Frisco, McKinney, Aubrey, Little Elm, Gunter, Pilot Point, Allen, Plano, and surrounding areas.
If the same part of your yard stays wet after every storm, Andy’s can help find the reason. Our Prosper team can inspect the drainage, explain the options, and install a French drain system that moves water away from the spots causing trouble.