What we see in Decatur
Decatur is 1920s–1940s bungalow and cottage stock in Oakhurst, Winnona Park, and the MAK district, and it runs on plumbing that predates most of its owners. Cast iron drains and galvanized supply are the baseline here, and both fail the same way: quietly, inside a wall, for weeks, until a floor goes soft or a smell arrives that nobody can source.
The tree canopy is the second character. Decatur has one of the densest canopies in the metro, and mature oaks over eighty-year-old roofs is a storm-season equation with one outcome. Limb strikes crack shingles that do not leak that day — they leak six weeks later during an ordinary rain, and by then nobody connects it to the storm.
The third thing is basements. A lot of Decatur houses have a below-grade level that was a furnace room in 1930 and is a guest suite now, framed and drywalled against a foundation that was never waterproofed for occupied space. Water comes through block, sits behind insulation, and the first symptom is bubbling paint at the baseboard rather than anything you can see.
Practically, Decatur is six miles from our door, which is the entire reason we cover it. Response time is the product in this business, and a house in Oakhurst is closer to us than parts of Atlanta are.
The failures that bring us here
- Cast iron and galvanized failures inside century-old walls
- Storm limb strikes producing delayed roof leaks
- Retrofitted finished basements with unwaterproofed foundations
- Crawlspace humidity under sealed, air-conditioned houses
- Slow leaks discovered only after flooring or trim fails
Response in Decatur
We're about 15 minutes from Decatur 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 Decatur
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 →