Highland Village Lake Lewisville General Contractor for Waterfront Foundations, Roofing, and Remodeling Since 2006
TriStar Built is the Highland Village general contractor families, HOAs, and lakefront owners call when a project must withstand Blackland Prairie clay movement, Lake Lewisville flood-pool changes, and the City of Highland Village's Floodplain Development Permit and Conditional Use Permit review. We have been a locally owned concrete, roofing, and remodeling contractor serving Highland Village neighborhoods since 2006. Our crews build from Pilot Knoll Park out to the Shops of Highland Village, Hickory Creek Estates, and the Justin Road corridor.





TriStar Built on Lake Lewisville: Highland Village Contractor Profile
Highland Village is a 1963-incorporated city of roughly 16,137 residents in Denton County, wrapped around the southern shoreline of Lake Lewisville and anchored by Pilot Knoll Park's 73-acre lakefront recreation area. The housing stock runs from 1960s-era lakeside homes through 1965-to-1980 post-incorporation expansion (including College Park and the Barnett Boulevard residential band) out to 1990-to-2025 master-planned neighborhoods and multi-acre waterfront estates. TriStar Built has worked inside this footprint since 2006, delivering concrete driveway installation, concrete foundations and slab work, home remodeling, commercial roofing, and residential roofing across Lewisville ISD's Marcus High School attendance zone.
Every Highland Village project is engineered for Blackland Prairie expansive clay (potential vertical rise of 1.5 to 2.5 inches), Austin Chalk variability on the western ridges, and the City of Highland Village's IBC-based building review. We coordinate Lake Lewisville floodplain approvals (100-year and 500-year FEMA), Landscape Plan pre-construction submittals, and the City's Conditional Use Permit process, where the scope calls for it. Active memberships include the North Texas Roofing Contractors Association (NTRCA) and the National Roofing Contractors Association (NRCA).
Years in Business
Completed Projects
Client Satisfaction
Trade Relationships

Best of Town Decatur: 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2023, 2024

Golden Hammer Award: 2018 (Hearts for Homes + Habitat for Humanity)

Hearts for Homes

Habitat for Humanity of Wise County
Concrete Driveways Across Highland Village
Driveways across Highland Village sit on two challenging substrates at once: deep Blackland Prairie clay that swells and shrinks up to 2.5 inches per season, and Austin Chalk seams running under the western ridges above the lake. We pour concrete driveways for Highland Village homes with rebar reinforcement, engineered subgrade conditioning, and control joints cut on a schedule that the Denton County clay actually respects. Whether the property fronts Pilot Knoll Park, sits inside Hickory Creek Estates, or parallels the Justin Road commercial spine, our crews handle the City of Highland Village permit, the Landscape Plan approval, and the pour as one coordinated job.
Broom, exposed aggregate, stamped concrete, and integral-color finishes, each prepared for the City of Highland Village's pre-construction Landscape Plan review. Our submittal packages address canopy preservation, lakefront setback, and the drainage calculations staff look for before issuing a permit.
We use moisture-conditioned subgrade, geotextile separation where plasticity index justifies it, and a 4-inch minimum slab with #4 rebar on 18-inch centers for residential drives. Lakefront and sloped sites get an engineered chalk-layer transition detail on file for the City's reviewers.
Annual crack sealing, joint re-caulking, and pressure washing to lift lake-spray mineral residue and mesquite tannin. The same Highland Village crew that installed your drive maintains it on a schedule we set up at project close-out.


Lake Lewisville Foundations and Slab Work in Highland Village
A foundation in Highland Village is a structural answer to Blackland Prairie clay behavior, Austin Chalk variability, and the seasonal flood-pool fluctuations of Lake Lewisville. We pour post-tension slabs, monolithic slabs, and pier-and-beam foundations throughout Highland Village as a foundation contractor familiar with the City's IBC adoption, the Upper West Fork Trinity River flood administration, and Elevation Certificate requirements for sites within the 100-year and 500-year FEMA floodplains. Our foundations pass every footing, pre-pour, and final inspection on the first walk when we have clean site access.
New-build post-tension slabs for waterfront estates on 1-to-3-acre lots, pier-and-beam designs for sloped lakefront parcels, and engineered transitions for homes that sit partially on Austin Chalk and partially on expansive clay. We work with Denton County structural engineers who have poured concrete along Lake Lewisville since the 1990s.
Foundation pours that trigger the City of Highland Village Conditional Use Permit process (usually oversized accessory structures, boathouse pads, or non-conforming lot builds) are coordinated from the geotechnical report forward. We sit in the City Council review when staff requests it.
Annual crack sealing, joint re-caulking, and pressure washing to lift lake-spray mineral residue and mesquite tannin. The same Highland Village crew that installed your drive maintains it on a schedule we set up at project close-out.
Home Remodeling for Highland Village and Lake Lewisville Estates
Highland Village's housing mix runs from 1960s lakeside originals through 1970s and 1980s post-incorporation neighborhoods to 1990-to-2025 master-planned homes and multi-acre waterfront estates. We provide full home remodeling services for Highland Village homeowners, including kitchen and bathroom remodeling, as well as whole-house remodel projects. Every design runs through the City of Highland Village's Landscape Plan and building review, through Marcus HS attendance-zone HOAs, where applicable, and through the Floodplain Development Permit process for anything within the Lake Lewisville flood pool.
Cabinetry, counters, view-oriented island reconfiguration, and lake-facing window upgrades for Hickory Creek Estates, College Park, and Pilot Knoll Park-adjacent homes. We pull the demolition, electrical, and mechanical permits the City requires and keep the Landscape Plan condition inside the submittal from day one.
Full tear-outs, tile, plumbing reroutes, and primary-suite expansions for LISD Marcus-zone households staying long-term. Accessibility retrofits for owners aging in place along Barnett Boulevard and in the Hickory Creek Estates core.
Second-story additions, room expansions, and whole-house remodel projects that take advantage of Lake Lewisville sightlines. When a project lies within the lake's floodplain envelope, we run the Substantial Improvement Threshold calculation with the City of Highland Village before the scope is finalized.


Commercial Roofing Along the Justin Road Corridor in Highland Village
Commercial buildings in Highland Village see spring hail, open-water wind gusts off Lake Lewisville, and the shared retail density of the Justin Road and Long Prairie Road corridors. As a commercial roofing contractor serving Highland Village, we install, inspect, and replace commercial roofs across the Shops of Highland Village, Lakeside Village, Highlands Plaza at the Justin/Long Prairie junction, and the developing Highland Village Town Square civic-retail cluster. TriStar Built handles the insurance-claim coordination that follows Denton County's pattern of two to three significant storm events each spring, and the permitting that the City of Highland Village runs on commercial occupancies.
Post-storm inspections, pre-purchase inspections, and annual maintenance inspections on retail, office, and mixed-use roofs along Justin Road and Long Prairie Road. Every inspection is documented with photography and a written report, which we send directly to the insurance carrier on request.
TPO and modified-bitumen patching, flashing reseals, and penetration re-flashing for the Shops of Highland Village anchor pads, Lakeside Village tenant stacks, and the Highlands Plaza complex that spans the Highland Village and Flower Mound line.
Full tear-offs and replacements in TPO, PVC, modified bitumen, and metal across the Town Square civic-retail development and freestanding office pads. Material choice follows occupancy, insurance class, and the City of Highland Village's IBC commercial assembly requirements.
Residential Roofing on Lake Lewisville in Highland Village
Highland Village residential roofing is wind-and-hail country with a lakefront twist. The North Texas hail corridor puts 1 to 2 significant hail events per decade on the City, and Lake Lewisville's open water raises gust speeds on the roofs that line its south shore.
As a residential roofing company serving Highland Village, we install Class 4 impact-resistant asphalt shingles, EuroShield rubber shingles, and standing-seam metal roofs, with Landscape Plan review and HOA submittals handled up front for lakefront color and profile restrictions. Roof repair for isolated hail strikes or tree impact is a same-week job in most cases.
Free post-storm inspections, full photo documentation, and direct communication with your insurance adjuster. We have worked with every major carrier writing policies across Denton County, including State Farm, Allstate, Farmers, USAA, and Travelers, on Highland Village roofs from Pilot Knoll Park to Hickory Creek Estates.
Full tear-off and replacement with color-matched drip edge, upgraded underlayment for lake-exposure wind, and ridge vent installation. Most Highland Village reroofs take 1 to 3 days to complete. Roof repair for isolated hail strikes, wind-lifted shingles, or tree-impact penetrations is handled the same week when scheduling allows.
Class 4 impact-resistant asphalt, EuroShield rubber, and standing-seam metal roofs, paired with manufacturer warranties and our written workmanship coverage. We document the Class 4 rating on every invoice so Highland Village owners can claim Denton County insurance discounts where carriers allow them.



Book Your Highland Village Project Walkthrough
Our team will walk the property, note the Landscape Plan and City of Highland Village permit conditions, and send a written estimate within three business days. No obligation.
Why Highland Village and Lake Lewisville Owners Choose TriStar Built
TriStar Built is a family-owned general contractor headquartered at 2126 James Street in Denton, 15 to 18 minutes north of Highland Village. We have served Highland Village, Flower Mound, Corinth, Lantana, and the broader North Texas region since 2006.
The crew that pours your lakefront slab is the same crew that has poured foundations across Denton County for nearly two decades. Most of our concrete, framing, and roofing leads have been with TriStar Built for 10-plus years because we pay trades fairly and run job sites they want to come back to.
A dedicated project manager manages every Highland Village project, tracks it in JobTread for full cost and schedule transparency, and backs it with our written workmanship warranty. Recent examples include a lakefront post-tension slab with a Floodplain Development Permit on Lake Lewisville, a whole-home remodel in Hickory Creek Estates, and a commercial reroof at the Shops of Highland Village. We do not sub out communication; you will know what is happening on your project, when, and why.



We walk the site, listen to the scope, and note the Highland Village permitting path the project needs (City of Highland Village Building Department, Landscape Plan approval, Floodplain Development Permit for Lake Lewisville parcels, and the Conditional Use Permit process when one applies).
Full site documentation, existing-condition photography, and soil/structural notes when the project involves concrete or foundations.
Itemized scope, materials, and schedule delivered within three business days. Every line item shows you what you are paying for.
One dedicated project manager, in-house crew, daily updates, JobTread transparency on cost and schedule.
Final walkthrough, punch-list closeout, manufacturer warranty registration, and our written workmanship coverage in your hand before we leave.
"Working with Tri-Star has been a great experience. Not only do they do a great job, but they stand by their work. I highly recommend them!"
"I have used this company several times for different projects. I’ve always been pleased with their quality of service, their workmanship, and their customer service."
"We are so pleased with our master shower remodel. They came in and fixed a mess that another company made and exceeded our expectations! Kelly Peace made sure that everything was done properly and kept on top of things. We would use TriStar again and highly recommend them!"
Yes. The City of Highland Village requires permits for new construction, additions, structural remodels, reroofs, driveway pours that change drainage, and most mechanical, electrical, and plumbing work; a pre-construction Landscape Plan approval is required before the permit is issued, and projects on Lake Lewisville or inside the FEMA floodplain also require a separate Floodplain Development Permit. We handle each submittal for you.
The City of Highland Village follows an IBC-based building review, with local amendments administered by the Highland Village Building Department. Published information aligns with the 2018 to 2021 IBC cycle plus the current NEC, IPC, and IMC editions. Lakefront and floodplain projects are subject to additional review under the City's floodplain administration ordinance, which can extend plan review depending on the Elevation Certificate requirements.
Yes. Sites inside the Lake Lewisville 100-year or 500-year FEMA floodplain require a Floodplain Development Permit from the City of Highland Village, a licensed surveyor's Elevation Certificate, and a Substantial Improvement Threshold calculation when the scope exceeds 50 percent of the structure's value. We coordinate all three, and we build the finished-floor elevation the ordinance requires into the foundation design.
Lakefront parcels in Highland Village commonly sit on a transition between expansive clay of the Blackland Prairie and Austin Chalk, with the lake water table complicating drainage. Post-tension slabs are the default for level sites because they tolerate clay movement, while sloped or chalk-dominant parcels may call for pier-and-beam or engineered drilled piers. The geotechnical report picks the details; we build it.
The Conditional Use Permit (CUP) is a discretionary review the City of Highland Village uses for uses or structures that do not fit the straight-by-right zoning (for example, oversized accessory buildings, boathouse pads, non-conforming lot builds). The CUP runs through Planning & Zoning and then the City Council, adding 6 to 12 weeks to the schedule. We prepare the site plan and attend the hearings.
Lake Lewisville open-water exposure raises gust speeds on south-shore roofs, and the North Texas hail corridor adds 1 to 2 significant hail events per decade. Standing-seam metal roofs and Class 4 impact-resistant asphalt perform best on that combination, and EuroShield rubber is a third option for owners prioritizing impact rating and long cycle life. We install all three in accordance with the HOA and Landscape Plan color specifications.
Our Highland Village clients run across three groups: lakefront estate owners on Lake Lewisville with 1-to-3-acre parcels; master-planned-suburban homeowners in Hickory Creek Estates, College Park, and the Barnett Boulevard band; and commercial property owners along the Justin Road and Long Prairie Road corridors shared with Flower Mound. We take jobs of any size in any of those segments.
TriStar Built serves homeowners, business owners, and property managers across North Texas from our Denton headquarters. Explore the communities we work in below.



LOCATION: 2126 James Street, Denton, TX 76205
PHONE: (940) 381-2222
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