Outside
Photograph masonry cracks, separations, fascia changes, porch movement, and grading or downspout conditions.
Residential foundation repair
Home foundation work should be technically sound and easy to understand. The repair path should account for the structure below, the finishes above, and the people living through the project.
Request a site evaluation
Above grade / below grade
Homeowner field guide
A short record of changes can make the first conversation more useful. Dates and patterns are more valuable than guesswork about the cause.
Photograph masonry cracks, separations, fascia changes, porch movement, and grading or downspout conditions.
Note sticky openings, floor slopes, trim gaps, drywall cracks, and changes at cabinets, tile, or ceilings.
Record when symptoms first appeared and whether they change after rain, drought, plumbing events, or seasonal shifts.
Gather prior repair documents, remodeling changes, plumbing work, drainage work, and any earlier evaluations.
One property / connected systems
Site drainage
Plumbing conditions
Expansive soil
Trees + landscaping
Framing + finishes
Previous repair work
A proportionate scope
The next step might be monitoring, water-management coordination, foam leveling, localized concrete work, deep support, or a combination. A responsible recommendation explains why the method fits and where its limits are.
Plain-language explanation of the observed pattern
Defined work area and access assumptions
Clear separation of structural and cosmetic scopes
Practical guidance for the period after repair
Start with context
Share the city, foundation or slab type if known, where symptoms appear, when they began, and what happens during wet or dry periods. Photos and prior documents can help frame the site visit.
Request a residential evaluation