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The water serving Bridgeport at Creekside Landing comes from the Floridan Aquifer through the North Sumter Utility system. That aquifer delivers water with mineral content well above Florida’s average hardness of 216 PPM — and those minerals don’t just sit in your glass. They coat the inside of your water heater, build up in your dishwasher, and slowly choke the efficiency out of every appliance that touches your water.
Once a salt free conditioning system is installed, those calcium and magnesium minerals are still in your water — but they’ve been transformed at a structural level so they can’t bond to surfaces anymore. Your water heater runs more efficiently. Your showerheads stay clean. Your glassware comes out clear. The white crust on your faucets stops coming back. That’s not a small thing when you’ve invested in a home steps from Lake Sumter Landing.
For residents here who are managing their sodium intake — which is a real consideration for a lot of people in this community — there’s another benefit worth knowing. A salt free system adds nothing to your water. No sodium, no chemicals, no discharge into the wastewater system. You get protected water without trading one problem for another.
We’ve been serving Central Florida homeowners for over fifty years, and Bridgeport at Creekside Landing falls squarely within our service area. We’re based out of Leesburg, about 10 to 15 miles away via CR 466. When you call us, you’re not reaching a call center in another state. You’re speaking with a local team that knows Sumter County’s water and the specific challenges it presents to homes in District 6.
We hold an A+ rating from the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints on record — which is genuinely uncommon in this industry. We’re also members of the Water Quality Association, which means we’ve passed competency exams and are held to a professional code of ethics. That’s not a marketing line. It’s a verifiable record you can look up before you ever pick up the phone.
We also offer a $500 discount for military personnel and first responders — a straightforward way of recognizing the people who served, in a community where that service is well represented.
It starts with a free water test at your home. One of our technicians comes out, tests your water, and gives you an honest read on what’s actually in it. No pressure, no upsell — just information. For homes in Bridgeport at Creekside Landing drawing from the NSU/VWCA system, that test almost always confirms elevated hardness levels. Knowing your specific numbers helps us determine the right system size for your home, whether you’re in a courtyard villa or one of the cottage-style homes near the Creekside Landing recreation area.
From there, installation is straightforward. The system is typically installed at the main water entry point — usually in a garage or utility area — so it treats every drop of water before it reaches any fixture or appliance in the house. There’s no electricity required, no drain line needed, and no brine discharge going into the community’s wastewater system. The whole installation usually takes a few hours.
After that, there’s genuinely nothing you need to do. The TAC media inside the system works continuously without any input from you. No salt to buy, no settings to adjust, no service calls until the media is due for replacement — typically every five to seven years. For a community built around low-maintenance living, that’s the point.
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The core of what we install is a whole-house TAC system — Template Assisted Crystallization — which is the technology with the strongest independent testing record in the salt free category. DVGW Standard W512 testing has shown scale prevention rates consistently above 90%. That’s the standard that matters, and it’s the one competitors with magnetic or electronic devices can’t match.
For homeowners in Bridgeport at Creekside Landing specifically, the whole-house approach is important. The courtyard villas and cottage homes in this area have compact plumbing footprints, but the Floridan Aquifer’s mineral load affects every line in the house — not just the kitchen sink. Protecting your water heater matters here because hard water above 26 GPG can reduce heater efficiency by up to 48% and shorten its lifespan significantly. A water heater failure in a hard-water home averages $4,400 to replace. That’s a real number.
Installation is handled by our licensed, experienced technicians who understand what the NSU/VWCA water system delivers to homes in this district. The system itself requires no electricity, produces zero wastewater discharge, and carries no ongoing costs beyond the media replacement every five to seven years. We also offer whole-house filtration and residential reverse osmosis if your water test reveals additional concerns beyond hardness — but we’ll tell you what you actually need, not what adds the most to an invoice.
Yes — and it’s well-documented. The water serving Bridgeport at Creekside Landing comes from the Floridan Aquifer through the North Sumter Utility and Villages Water Conservation Authority system, which covers Districts 5 through 8, including District 6 where this neighborhood sits. Florida’s average water hardness runs around 216 PPM, which already qualifies as very hard by any standard measurement. The Villages area specifically has been flagged in water quality monitoring for elevated hardness scores.
What that means in practical terms is calcium and magnesium deposits building up inside your water heater, on your showerheads, inside your dishwasher, and along your pipes — steadily, every day. If you’ve noticed white buildup on your faucets that won’t clean off, or spots on your glassware after a full dishwasher cycle, that’s the mineral content at work. It’s not a cleaning problem. It’s a water problem, and a salt free conditioning system addresses it at the source.
A traditional salt-based softener removes calcium and magnesium from your water by replacing them with sodium ions. That process works, but it comes with tradeoffs — you’re adding sodium to every gallon of water that flows through your home, you’re discharging a brine waste stream into the wastewater system with every regeneration cycle, and you’re committing to buying and hauling salt on a regular basis.
A salt free conditioner using TAC technology doesn’t remove those minerals. Instead, it changes their physical structure so they can no longer bond to surfaces. The minerals are still in your water, but they pass through your plumbing harmlessly instead of depositing as scale. For residents in Bridgeport at Creekside Landing who are watching their sodium intake or who simply don’t want to deal with the ongoing maintenance of a salt system, that distinction matters. No sodium added, no brine discharge into the community’s wastewater infrastructure, and nothing to maintain month to month.
The most credible answer to that question comes from independent testing, not manufacturer claims. TAC technology has been evaluated under the DVGW Standard W512 protocol — a recognized international testing standard for water conditioners — and has consistently shown scale prevention rates above 90%. That’s a meaningful number when you compare it to magnetic or electronic descalers, which have no credible independent test data behind them.
The specific mineral profile of the Floridan Aquifer — predominantly calcium carbonate hardness — is exactly the type of hardness that TAC technology is designed to address. We test your water before recommending any system, so you’re not guessing whether it’s the right fit. If the test shows your water has concerns beyond hardness, like iron or chlorine levels, we’ll tell you that too and recommend accordingly. The goal is a system that actually solves your problem, not one that looks good on a brochure.
Essentially none — and that’s one of the main reasons this system fits the lifestyle in Bridgeport at Creekside Landing so well. The Villages markets a low-maintenance way of living, and a salt free TAC system is one of the few home investments that actually delivers on that. Once it’s installed, it runs continuously without electricity, without a drain connection, and without any input from you.
The only scheduled maintenance is a TAC media replacement, which typically happens every five to seven years. The system itself can last ten to twenty years. There are no salt deliveries to schedule, no regeneration cycles to monitor, and no service calls to manage. Compare that to a traditional softener, which requires regular salt purchases, periodic brine tank cleaning, and occasional service when the resin or control valve needs attention. For a retired homeowner who moved to The Villages to enjoy life rather than manage appliances, the difference is significant.
A salt free TAC conditioner is not a filtration system, so it won’t change the taste or smell of your water on its own. What it does is prevent scale formation — the mineral deposits that damage appliances and fixtures. If your water has a chlorine taste or any odor issues, those are separate concerns that a whole-house carbon filtration system or a reverse osmosis unit would address.
When we test your water at your home, we’re looking at the full picture — not just hardness. If your results show chlorine levels, iron, or other contaminants alongside the hardness that’s typical for homes on the NSU/VWCA system here in District 6, we’ll walk you through what each finding means and what, if anything, should be done about it. Some homeowners end up with a conditioner only. Others add a whole-house filter or an under-sink reverse osmosis unit for drinking water. The recommendation depends on what your water actually shows, not on what generates the biggest sale.
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