Call and a licensed plumber heads your way, usually knocking on your Olmos Park door inside 45 minutes.
Olmos Park is full of homes built in the 1920s and 1930s, and that history shows up under the floors. A lot of these houses still run on galvanized steel supply lines and cast iron drains that have been quietly rusting for decades. When the water pressure drops in an upstairs bath or a drain starts backing up for no clear reason, aging pipe is usually the story. We find it, show you what we see, and talk through your options before we touch anything.
The soil around here doesn't help. San Antonio sits on expansive clay that swells after a good rain and shrinks tight during a long dry summer. That constant movement puts stress on slab plumbing and on old sewer lines, which is why slab leaks and cracked pipes are so common in this part of town. We run a camera through the line to see exactly what's going on, then pinpoint the leak so we're not tearing up more of your floor than we have to.
Those big mature oaks and pecans that make Olmos Park streets so pretty also send roots straight into older clay sewer lines. If your drains gurgle or a toilet is slow across the whole house, roots are a likely suspect. We clear the line with a rooter and put a camera down after to confirm it's actually open, not just moving again for a week.
Whatever you're dealing with, from a burst pipe to a water heater that quit overnight, one call gets a real plumber rolling. We come with the truck stocked so most jobs get handled in the same visit.
“Woke up to water spreading across the kitchen floor and had no idea where it was coming from. The plumber showed up about half an hour after I called, traced it to a slab leak under the cabinets, and had it located without digging up the whole room. He explained every step. Huge relief.”
Call now: a San Antonio plumber picks up in seconds, day or night.
(210) 555-0134