Get your pool fixed right.
Why Mid-Cities Pools Face Serious Leak Risks
The HEB area—Hurst, Euless, Bedford—and nearby Grapevine sit on some of the most challenging soil in Tarrant County. These cities are built largely on the Woodbine Formation, a dense, iron-rich soil that ranges from sandy in some areas to highly expansive clay in others. This variability means soil movement can differ dramatically from one street to the next.
Where the clay content is high, the soil absorbs water quickly during rain and swells, then shrinks and cracks during dry periods. This constant expansion and contraction puts major stress on pool shells, plumbing lines, and concrete decks.
Tarrant County is one of the most impacted regions in the nation for soil-related structural damage—foundation issues here cause more financial loss than hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, and earthquakes combined.
Whether you’re in Villages of Bear Creek, Westdale Hills, Meadow Park, Texas Star (Euless); East Bedford Central, Oak Ridge Heights, Woodhaven, Martin Drive Estates, Bedford Heights (Bedford); or Silver Lake, Grapevine Lake Estates, Stone Bridge Oaks, or Historic Downtown Grapevine—every pool faces the same soil movement. Pools built in the 1970s–1990s are especially vulnerable as original materials and seals age.

