Round Rock, TX Outdoor & Landscape Lighting Services

Round Rock sits directly on the Balcones Escarpment, and the difference shows up the moment a crew starts trenching: east of I-35, the ground is flat, deep, high-clay blackland prairie soil that shrinks and swells with the rain; west of the interstate, toward Behrens Ranch and the Hill Country side of the city, thin topsoil sits over limestone bedrock. Brushy Creek — the namesake for the city’s famous anvil-shaped boulder — winds through the middle of town past the historic limestone storefronts of Old Town’s Main Street, and defines much of Round Rock’s older residential grid.

That geography shapes the work. Established, tree-canopied neighborhoods like Forest Creek and Round Rock West often need uplighting designed around live oaks that have had two or three decades to mature, while newer, HOA-governed master-planned communities such as Teravista and Mayfield Ranch call for a design that respects strict community guidelines on fixture color temperature and glare from the start. Homes built on the blackland clay east of I-35 also need fixtures set and cabled in a way that won’t heave as the soil shifts through a Central Texas summer and winter.

Delta Outdoor Lighting, founded in Georgetown in 1994, has spent more than three decades designing and installing low-voltage lighting systems throughout Williamson County, including properties in Round Rock’s Teravista and along the Brushy Creek Regional Trail corridor.

Our Services in Round Rock, TX

Delta Outdoor Lighting brings its full range of low-voltage design and installation services to Round Rock, from everyday landscape and path lighting to pool, tree, and architectural accent lighting. Every service below is available throughout Round Rock and the surrounding Williamson County communities Delta already serves.

Landscape Lighting in Round Rock, TX

Round Rock’s blackland-clay flats east of I-35 and the limestone-based rises toward Behrens Ranch and Teravista call for different trenching approaches, and Delta’s crews adjust cable runs and fixture footing for each. Typical week-to-week work includes path lighting along winding drives in Forest Creek, uplighting for the mature oaks that give Round Rock West its established character, and accent lighting for the newer HOA-governed streets of Mayfield Ranch. Every system runs on a low-voltage transformer sized with headroom for fixtures added as landscaping matures.

Services include:

  • Path & walkway lighting
  • Driveway lighting
  • Low-voltage garden lighting
  • Step & stair lights
  • Security lighting
  • Wall-mount & soffit lighting
Sample photo of led landscape lighting installation

Architectural Lighting in Round Rock, TX

Stone-and-stucco facades common throughout Behrens Ranch and the Hill Country-influenced homes west of I-35 take well to up- and down-lighting that follows the building’s lines rather than floodlighting the whole front elevation. Delta also lights commercial storefronts and monument signage near the University Boulevard retail corridor.

Services include:

  • Facade up/down-lighting
  • Column & archway accents
  • Commercial monument & signage lighting
Sample photo of architectural led lighting installation

Tree Lighting in Round Rock, TX

The mature live oaks and pecans found in older sections of Round Rock West and along Brushy Creek make natural focal points for uplighting, while newer subdivisions like Siena and Mayfield Ranch often plant specimen trees that benefit from a coordinated lighting plan from day one. Delta positions well lights and bullet fixtures to highlight canopy structure without washing out the trunk.

Services include:

  • Tree uplighting
  • Canopy & silhouette lighting
  • Downlighting for mature trees
  • Seasonal & holiday tree lighting

Patio Lighting in Round Rock, TX

With Round Rock’s long outdoor season, patio and deck lighting extends the hours families spend on covered porches in Teravista and poolside patios in Paloma Lake. Delta layers post lights, step lights, and low-glare fixtures so evening entertaining space stays usable well past sunset, without glare spilling into a neighbor’s window on the tighter lots common near La Frontera.

Services include:

  • Deck & patio accent lighting
  • Post lights
  • Step & stair lighting
  • Recessed lighting
  • Fence lighting
Sample photo of patio LED lighting installation

Poolscape
Lighting

Backyard pools are common throughout Round Rock’s newer master-planned sections — Teravista, Paloma Lake, and Mayfield Ranch all have pool-heavy streets — and poolscape lighting keeps the deck and water safely lit for evening swims. Delta designs around coping, waterfall features, and surrounding hardscape rather than treating pool lighting as an afterthought.

Services include:

  • Pool deck lighting
  • Hardscape accent lighting
  • Waterfall & feature lighting
  • Palm & specimen-plant lighting

Moon Lighting in Round Rock, TX

Moonlighting — soft, filtered downlighting hung high in mature trees — works especially well in the established canopy along Round Rock West and Forest Creek, casting a natural, dappled-shadow effect across the lawn instead of a flat wash of light. It also doubles as a deterrent, keeping yards visible after dark without the security-flood glare that HOA design guidelines in communities like Teravista often restrict.

Services include:

  • High-mount downlighting
  • Dappled shadow-pattern lighting
  • Natural security lighting for tree-heavy lots
Sample photo of moon led lighting installation

Local Expertise in Round Rock — We Know This Area

Geography, Soil & Terrain

Round Rock sits directly on the Balcones Escarpment, and Delta’s crews plan differently depending on which side of I-35 a property falls on. East of the interstate, the black, high-clay “blackland prairie” soil shrinks and swells enough with Central Texas rain cycles to heave a poorly set fixture within a season or two; west of I-35 toward Behrens Ranch and the Hill Country side of town, thin topsoil over limestone bedrock means narrow-blade trenchers and hand-digging replace a standard spade. Brushy Creek, which winds through the middle of the city and gives Round Rock its name, also means some lower-lying lots near the creek corridor call for cable routed above typical flood-prone grade.

Roads, Access & Neighborhoods We Serve

Delta’s crews travel Round Rock via I-35, Gattis School Road, and University Boulevard to reach jobs ranging from the older, established streets of Round Rock West to the newer construction pushing northwest along the Mayfield Ranch corridor. Regular service areas include Teravista, Behrens Ranch, Forest Creek, Paloma Lake, Siena, and the Old Town district near Main Street.

Local Project Experience

Round Rock’s mix of 1990s-era neighborhoods with mature live oaks (Forest Creek, Round Rock West) and newer, HOA-governed subdivisions (Mayfield Ranch, Highlands at Mayfield Ranch) means Delta designs for two very different starting points in the same city — relighting an established canopy on one job, laying out a first system for a brand-new build on the next. Commercial work near the University Boulevard retail corridor and around the Dell campus adds monument and storefront lighting to the regular mix.

Local Regulatory & Seasonal Awareness

Most of Delta’s Round Rock installations are low-voltage systems that fall outside standard building permit requirements, though a new dedicated GFCI outlet for the transformer can require an electrical permit that Delta coordinates directly. Communities with active HOA design guidelines — common throughout Teravista and Mayfield Ranch — often specify warm color temperature and shielded fixtures, a standard Delta already builds into every design per DarkSky International’s shielding guidance. Central Texas’s hot, humid summers and occasional hard freezes also mean fixture housings and cable need to hold up to real temperature swings, not just mild weather.

Why Round Rock Homeowners and Businesses Choose Delta Outdoor Lighting

Serving Round Rock and Surrounding Areas

Delta Outdoor Lighting is a full-service outdoor lighting company serving Round Rock, TX and the surrounding Central Texas communities within its standard service radius. In addition to Round Rock, Delta regularly designs and installs landscape, architectural, and poolscape lighting throughout:

  • Austin
  • Georgetown
  • Leander
  • Liberty Hill
  • Cedar Park
  • Lago Vista
  • Bee Cave
  • Westlake
  • Lakeway

Frequently Asked Questions

Professional low-voltage landscape lighting in Round Rock typically runs $100 to $300 per fixture installed, depending on fixture material and design complexity — a modest front-yard system in a subdivision like Mayfield Ranch might use 10 to 15 fixtures, while a full-property design with tree uplighting and pathway lighting in an established neighborhood like Round Rock West can use 30 or more. Delta provides a free on-site consultation and a written quote based on the actual property.
Yes. Delta regularly lights properties throughout Teravista and along the corridor near Old Settlers Park and the Brushy Creek Regional Trail, adjusting the design for golf-course lots, lakefront yards, and standard subdivision lots alike.
Yes — Delta regularly services both areas, from the mature, tree-lined streets of Round Rock West near the I-35 corridor to the elevated, limestone-terrain lots of Behrens Ranch on the city's northwest side, where hilltop views call for a different lighting approach than flatter lots closer to downtown.
Most low-voltage (12-volt) landscape lighting installations don't require a building permit since the system operates at a fraction of household voltage. If a property needs a new dedicated GFCI outlet to power the transformer, that portion of the work may require an electrical permit, which Delta coordinates as part of the installation.
Most residential systems take one to three days from trenching to final aiming, depending on property size, fixture count, and whether the run crosses limestone on the west side of town or expansive clay on the east side. Delta schedules a nighttime walkthrough once fixtures are aimed so adjustments can be made before the crew leaves.
Not significantly. LED landscape lighting fixtures draw 2 to 8 watts each, compared to 20 to 50 watts for older halogen bulbs, so even a 20-fixture system running six to eight hours a night typically adds only a few dollars a month to a utility bill.