What we see in Inman Park
Joel Hurt laid Inman Park out in 1889 as Atlanta's first planned residential suburb, and the housing that survived is large — 3,000-plus square foot Victorians with multiple bathrooms stacked over each other and supply runs long enough to develop problems in the middle. The failures here are rarely dramatic. They're a second-floor bathroom line weeping into the ceiling of the room below for a month.
What makes Inman Park expensive is what got installed during restoration. These houses have been meticulously brought back with heart pine floors, plaster restoration, and custom millwork. When water gets into that, the mitigation is the cheap part — the reconstruction is where the number lives. A clean-water loss caught in twelve hours might dry in place. The same loss found in five days means pulling out finish work that a specialist spent months installing.
The BeltLine Eastside Trail runs the neighborhood's edge, and the density that came with it added carriage houses, ADUs, and basement conversions to properties that were single-family for a century. Those conversions put plumbing in places the original structure never planned for, usually with the drain line taking the longest possible path to the street.
Inman Park also has more genuinely old trees than almost anywhere intown, and they sit close to genuinely old roofs. Storm season here reliably produces limb strikes on slate and cedar — roof materials that cost real money to repair correctly and that a general roofing crew will happily replace with architectural shingle if nobody's watching. When a storm loss opens up a historic roof, what goes back on matters, and that's a conversation to have before the tarp comes off.
The failures that bring us here
- Second-floor bathroom leaks discovered through the ceiling below
- Long horizontal supply runs failing mid-span inside walls
- High-value finish work — heart pine, plaster, custom millwork — in the loss path
- Basement and carriage-house conversions with retrofitted plumbing
- Slow leaks in vacant or seasonally occupied large homes
Response in Inman Park
We're about 5 minutes from Inman Park in normal traffic. Short drive, not a dispatch decision. Emergency crews run 24/7. Every job gets photographed before we touch anything, moisture-mapped, and logged daily until the structure reads dry — the documentation your adjuster needs, built as we go.
If there's water moving right now, call. If it can wait an hour, the form below works fine.
Services we run in Inman Park
Water Damage Restoration
Extraction, structural drying, and everything after.
Water Damage →Fire & Smoke Damage
The fire is out. The damage is not done.
Fire & Smoke →Mold Remediation
Kill the moisture or the mold comes back.
Mold →Sewage & Biohazard Cleanup
Category 3 water plays by different rules.
Sewage →Storm & Roof Leak Damage
When the roof loses, the water wins.
Storm Damage →Reconstruction & Repairs
Mitigation is half the job. Somebody has to put it back.
Reconstruction →