Mitigation specialists for the Texas Star Golf Course community east of SH 360. IICRC certified, on-site in 22 to 25 minutes from our Southlake operations base. Sprinkler ruptures, copper pinhole leaks, attic water heater failures, and post-tension slab water migration.
Texas Star is the golf-course community anchored by the Texas Star Golf Club, east of SH 360 and north of Glade Road in southern Euless. The neighborhood profile is distinct from the rest of Euless: predominantly late 1990s through 2010s upscale homes, 2,800 to 5,000 square feet, brick and stone veneer, with course-side and pond-side lots driving premium property values. Construction is post-tension slab on grade, copper supply lines, PVC drain. From our Southlake shop on N. Carroll Avenue, Texas Star is 22 to 25 minutes via SH 114 east to SH 360 south, with Glade Road as the fastest exit.
The water damage pattern in Texas Star is not the old-galvanized failure mode that dominates the rest of Euless. The earliest builds are now hitting the 25 to 30 year window where copper supply lines start producing pinhole leaks, the irrigation infrastructure is mature and failure-prone, and the post-tension slab construction creates its own set of water migration risks. Higher property values and the occasional finished basement raise the stakes per claim. We load equipment differently for Texas Star than for the older parts of Euless.
Irrigation and Sprinkler Line Ruptures
The dominant failure mode here. Texas Star homes sit on heavily landscaped lots tied into extensive in-ground irrigation, often near or adjacent to the golf course watering infrastructure. Backflow preventers, valve manifolds, and main supply runs are now 15 to 25 years old on the earliest builds, and failure rate accelerates sharply in that window. A ruptured line under landscaping can run for hours before anyone notices, and when the leak is on the house side of the meter it saturates the foundation perimeter and migrates inward. We arrive ready to trace the source, extract from the perimeter inward, and document the IICRC S500 Category 1 or 2 designation correctly for the carrier.
Copper Supply Line Pinhole Leaks
The original copper supply lines in the earliest Texas Star builds are now well into the pinhole-leak window. These failures present as a small, steady drip behind drywall, often producing a stained ceiling or warped baseboard before the homeowner ever hears running water. By the time the visible damage appears, the wall cavity is already saturated and microbial growth is starting. We use thermal imaging and pin-style moisture meters to map the full extent of the wet area, then design a containment and drying chamber that addresses the cavity, not just the surface. Half-measures on pinhole jobs are how secondary mold claims start.
Attic Water Heater Failures
Many Texas Star two-story floor plans were built with 50 or 75 gallon water heaters on an attic platform to preserve garage square footage. The original tanks on most homes are well past the 10 to 15 year service window. When a tank lets go in the attic, water drops through the attic floor, runs along ceiling joists, and exits through can lights, vents, and bath fans into multiple downstairs rooms. We carry attic-rated extraction lances and high-volume desiccant dehumidifiers for this loss type and we set containment at the affected ceiling cavities before opening any drywall.
Golf-Course-Adjacent Groundwater Intrusion
Lots backing the Texas Star course and the community ponds sit at lower elevation than the surrounding streets, and during heavy spring or fall storms the watershed pushes saturation against the foundation. Storm-driven groundwater intrusion needs a different protocol than a clean-water supply break: the IICRC S500 category is different (Category 2 or 3 depending on the source), the demolition decision tree is different, and the documentation for the carrier has to reflect that. We have run multiple jobs on the course-side streets and we know which lots carry the highest groundwater exposure during DFW storm events.
Post-Tension Slab Cracking and Water Migration
Post-tension slabs are standard across Texas Star construction. When the slab develops a crack, whether from soil movement or original construction tolerance, water from above-slab leaks or below-slab groundwater can migrate horizontally along the crack and surface several rooms away from the source. The visible wet spot is rarely the leak location. We use thermal imaging combined with moisture meter mapping to trace the actual source before any cutting begins, document the migration path for the carrier, and design the drying chamber based on where the water actually is, not where the homeowner first noticed it.
What We Do When You Call
Mitigation only. We extract standing water with truck-mounted and portable equipment, identify and stop the source, remove unsalvageable materials under containment, and meter to dry standard with commercial air movers and low-grain refrigerant dehumidifiers per IICRC S500. We log psychrometric readings every 24 hours and document everything through CleanClaims, including thermal imaging maps, moisture meter readings, equipment placement diagrams, and Xactimate-aligned scope sheets your adjuster will recognize. We do not perform reconstruction. Once the structure is dry to standard we hand off to your preferred general contractor.
Our Water Damage Restoration Work in Texas Star, Euless
Real photos from real Flood Titan Restoration jobs. No stock images, no rendered marketing shots. Every photo below is from work our IICRC certified team performed for an actual customer.
Full project arc: a kitchen water loss from initial extraction through dehumidification to finished rebuild.Pack-out truck loaded with wrapped, inventoried customer contents headed for climate-controlled storage.Pulled LVP exposes the wet subfloor underneath. We document the full saturation footprint before drying begins.Antimicrobial mist into exposed joist bays after demo. Standard IICRC S500 step before close-up.
5★ Reviews from Texas Star, Euless-Area Homeowners
Real Google reviews from real customers. Every Flood Titan Restoration review on Google is 5 stars. Below is a representative sample from Texas Star, Euless and the immediate surrounding cities.
★★★★★Attic Water Heater
"We just moved to Colleyville and our water heater in the attic decided to break and flood our entire downstairs. Great timing! Flood Titan Restoration sent their team out immediately and honestly made a stressful situation so much easier. Everyone was so friendly and made us feel like we were in good hands the whole time. They were super careful with all our stuff (we were still unpacking!) and got us back in our house way faster than we expected. Highly recommend these guys!"
Lorraine Spektor
Colleyville, TX
✓ Verified Google Review
★★★★★Winter Storm
"We had a massive water leak at our home during the snowstorm a few months ago that was bad enough to force our whole family to temporarily move out. It was an incredibly stressful and emotional time, especially with young kids who didn't fully understand why we had to leave our house. What I didn't expect was for Allan, the owner, to show up personally and bring toys for my children to help brighten their mood during such a difficult situation. The team was responsive, thorough, and clearly knew what they were doing. They didn't just restore our home — they took care of our family."
Sofya Miller
DFW area · Snowstorm response
✓ Verified Google Review
★★★★★Slab Leak
"Allan and his crew were a lifesaver. We had water coming up through the floor from a slab leak and I called Flood Titan late in the evening — they were at our house within the hour. Allan was upfront about what needed to happen, kept us in the loop every day, and worked directly with our insurance so we didn't have to fight that battle ourselves. The drying took a few days and they checked in constantly. You can tell they actually care about the people they're helping, not just finishing the job. Highly recommend if you're anywhere in the DFW area and need restoration done right."
Texas Star is 22 to 25 minutes from our Southlake operations base on N. Carroll Avenue. The fastest run is SH 114 east to SH 360 south, exiting at Glade Road. Truck is loaded and rolling within minutes of your call. We extract first, then ask the documentation questions, so the meter starts running down on secondary damage from the moment we arrive.
Texas Star homes sit on heavily landscaped lots with extensive in-ground irrigation, often tied into golf-course-adjacent watering infrastructure. The backflow preventers, valve manifolds, and main supply runs are 15 to 25 years old on the earliest builds and the failure rate accelerates fast in that window. A ruptured main under landscaping can run for hours before anyone notices, and when the leak is on the house side of the meter it can saturate the foundation perimeter and migrate under the slab into interior walls.
Many of the two-story Texas Star floor plans were built with 50 or 75 gallon water heaters on an attic platform to preserve garage space. A full tank rupture overwhelms the drain pan and cascades through the ceiling into multiple downstairs rooms. We arrive with attic-rated extraction lances, set containment at the affected ceiling cavities, and pair high-volume air movers with low-grain refrigerant dehumidifiers to dry framing and decking to S500 standard rather than chasing a calendar.
No. We are a mitigation specialist. We handle extraction, demolition of unsalvageable materials, structural drying to IICRC S500 standard, antimicrobial treatment, and full documentation through CleanClaims. We hand off to your preferred general contractor for the rebuild. If you do not have a builder in mind, we can recommend trusted Euless and Southlake GCs we have worked alongside on Texas Star and Mid-Cities jobs.
Texas Star Emergency? Call Now.
We answer 24/7. From our Southlake office, we are at your Texas Star door in 22 to 25 minutes. IICRC certified, fully insured, full insurance documentation included.