Commercial 2-Wire Irrigation
in Fort Worth, Texas
From Fort Worth's historic cultural district to the booming Alliance Corridor, we bring 2-wire decoder expertise to Tarrant County's most demanding commercial and municipal irrigation projects.
Fort Worth Irrigation Challenges
Mixed Soil Profiles
Tarrant County features a range of soil types from heavy clay near the Trinity River to sandier soils in the west. System design must account for different infiltration rates across a single property.
Wind & Evaporation
Fort Worth sits at the edge of the North Texas prairie, with prevailing southerly winds that dramatically increase evaporation rates and require careful precipitation rate planning.
Rapid Commercial Growth
The Alliance Corridor, Walsh Ranch, and other development zones are bringing large-scale commercial and mixed-use projects that require designed-in irrigation infrastructure.
Municipal & County Systems
Fort Worth Parks & Recreation and Tarrant County's municipal landscape requirements call for water-efficient systems with documented auditing capabilities.
Fort Worth Properties We Serve
- Municipal parks, recreation centers, and public grounds
- Industrial and logistics park landscaping
- Educational campuses and private schools
- Cultural venues and event facilities
- HOA communities and master-planned neighborhoods
- Healthcare and medical office facilities
- Retail developments and mixed-use projects
- Military installations
Fort Worth Coverage Areas
Fort Worth Client Results
"The Alliance Corridor campus we manage needed a complete new irrigation system for a 90-acre mixed-use development. 2 Wire Irrigation handled everything from design through commissioning and met every project milestone."
"Our parks department had three separate municipal properties with aging multi-wire systems. 2 Wire Irrigation brought all three onto modern 2-wire platforms on schedule. Our maintenance costs dropped significantly the first season."
Fort Worth Irrigation Resources
Guides for Tarrant County commercial properties — from freeze preparedness to system planning.
How to Prepare Your Commercial Irrigation System for a Texas Freeze
February 2021 taught Texas property owners an expensive lesson about freeze preparedness. Irrigation systems were among the most costly failures. Here's exactly how to protect a commercial 2-wire…
2-Wire vs. Multi-Wire Irrigation: Which Is Right for Your Property?
If you're planning a new commercial irrigation system or considering a major upgrade, the choice between 2-wire decoder and traditional multi-wire architecture is one of the most consequential…
The Complete Commercial Irrigation Maintenance Schedule for Texas Properties
Texas weather is brutal on commercial irrigation systems — summer heat, freeze events, soil movement, and drought cycling create failure modes that only disciplined seasonal maintenance can prevent.…
Fort Worth Irrigation FAQs
Common questions from Tarrant County commercial property owners and facilities teams.
We cover all of Tarrant County including Fort Worth, Arlington, Mansfield, Burleson, Crowley, Keller, Southlake, Hurst, Euless, and Bedford. We also serve adjacent counties including Johnson County (Cleburne, Burleson) and Parker County (Weatherford). The Alliance Corridor and North Fort Worth growth areas are a significant part of our Fort Worth work.
The prevailing southerly winds in Fort Worth are a real design factor. Wind increases evapotranspiration rates significantly, drives drift from sprinkler heads, and can create uneven coverage patterns in exposed areas. We address wind effects through head selection (rotors over spray heads in open areas), lower trajectory nozzles in exposed zones, and higher coverage overlap than standard design guides recommend for sheltered environments.
Yes. We work with municipal parks departments, public works departments, and county facilities throughout Tarrant County. Municipal work requires licensed irrigator oversight, proper permitting, and documentation to public works standards — all of which we handle routinely.
The Alliance Corridor and Walsh Ranch areas are among the fastest-growing commercial development zones in Texas. We are active in these corridors working with general contractors, civil engineers, and property developers on new commercial irrigation installations from design through commissioning.
Our DFW field team covers both Fort Worth and Dallas. For active failures in Tarrant County, we target same-day or next-day response during the irrigation season. Standard service requests are typically scheduled within 3–5 business days. Maintenance clients receive priority scheduling.
Yes. Tarrant County's soil varies from the heavy clay near the Trinity River bottom to lighter, sandier soils in the western parts of the county. Our design process includes soil assessment that identifies infiltration rates across the property and designs zone precipitation rates and scheduling to match what each soil type can absorb.
Ready to Discuss Your Fort Worth Project?
Our Tarrant County team is ready to provide a free assessment of your property's irrigation needs.