FAQ · Service Area
Do you service Fairfield County, CT?
Yes — every town in Fairfield County, with thirty-plus years of work specifically tuned to coastal water tables and the older foundation eras you find from Greenwich to Danbury.
Short answer
Yes — all of Fairfield County. Specifically Stamford, Greenwich, Norwalk, Danbury, and the surrounding towns. Connecticut’s 42-inch frost depth code is applied to every discharge line we install, and we adjust the system design to your specific neighborhood’s soil and water-table behavior.
The full picture
Fairfield County is not one job. The coast behaves differently from the backcountry, and the foundation under a 1920s Shippan Point Cape Cod is nothing like the foundation under a 1990s subdivision on Mill Plain Road in Danbury. We’ve worked across all of it, and the design changes accordingly.
What changes city-to-city
- Stamford — coastal sandy soil with clay pockets in older neighborhoods. The water table near Long Island Sound (Shippan, Cove) fluctuates with the tide on waterfront properties. Coastal flood-zone considerations near AE zones affect some installs.
- Greenwich — two completely different builds. Old Greenwich, Riverside, and Cos Cob run high water tables and 1890s fieldstone foundations. The Greenwich Backcountry (Round Hill, Banksville) is rocky New England glacial till with Inland Wetlands oversight on many parcels.
- Norwalk — South Norwalk near the harbor sits on a high water table; West Norwalk hills are moderate. Wilson Point and Bell Island waterfront homes need extra attention to discharge routing.
- Danbury — glacial till with clay-heavy lowland pockets. Lake Kenosia and Candlewood Lake adjacent neighborhoods carry higher water tables than the Hat City Hills.
What stays the same
Three things never change across Fairfield County, regardless of your town:
- Free 60-minute on-site inspection with a specialist who walks every foundation wall.
- Written estimate within 24 hours — no verbal guesses, no high-pressure follow-up.
- Lifetime, transferable waterproofing warranty in writing — useful when you eventually sell the house.
The contrarian we lead with
Most Fairfield County waterproofing jobs do not need exterior excavation. Interior drainage with a properly sized sump system solves the majority of cases — faster, less invasive, and at a meaningfully lower cost than digging up your yard. We’ll tell you straight when excavation is the right call (the 10–15% of cases where it genuinely is), and when it isn’t, we won’t sell it to you.
Free inspection. Written estimate within 24 hours.
No verbal guesses. No high-pressure follow-up. Just a specialist who shows up on time.