
Basement Waterproofing and Foundation Repair in Wheeling, WV
Wheeling’s soil and heavy rain do no favors for your home’s basement, crawl space, or exterior concrete slabs. Basement Authority of West Virginia has proven solutions to stop the problem permanently.
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What do you need help with?Clarksburg Local Office
Basement Authority of West Virginia
1807 West Pike Street Ste C
Clarksburg, WV 26301
(304) 449-5184
Hours of Operation
Monday – Friday: 7 am – 9 pm
Saturday: 8 am – 6 pm
Sunday: 10 am – 7 pm
AWARD-WINNING SOLUTIONS IN WHEELING
Basement Authority of West Virginia (BAWV), a Groundworks Company, specializes in helping homeowners with their foundation repair, basement waterproofing, crawl space, and concrete needs. Our top priority is providing high-quality home repair solutions and personalized service across West Virginia. With fully trained technicians, industry-leading products, and nationally backed warranties, BAWV is here to restore your foundation or basement.
THE BASEMENT AUTHORITY OF WV PROCESS
WHY HOMEOWNERS CHOOSE BASEMENT AUTHORITY OF WEST VIRGINIA
Since 2003, Basement Authority of West Virginia, a Groundworks Company, has been helping homeowners throughout West Virginia repair and protect their most valuable asset – their home. We are a local, trusted provider of reliable basement waterproofing, crawl space repair and encapsulation, foundation repair, and concrete lifting and leveling solutions. Everything we install is warranty-backed and tested and proven to provide long-lasting support.
To address each unique home with long-lasting, personalized, warrantied solutions, our professional team keeps you, the homeowner, in mind and produces high-quality results. You can depend on us to install everything the right way the first time, and we never back down from a job. By scheduling a free inspection and estimate, you can personally experience the excellence and rest easy knowing your home is permanently protected.
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OUR SERVICES FOR YOU
Basement Waterproofing in Wheeling
Wheeling gets 41 inches of rain annually and 20 inches of snow. While this is good for your grass, it spells problems for your basement because of the area’s silt loam soil. Water collects around your home, soaking deep and putting pressure on your basement walls. This pressure leads to wall cracks that allow water to enter. Where there is water there is mold, mildew, and musty odors. Basement Authority of West Virginia has solutions to keep your basement dry like interior drains, sump pumps, wall liners, and dehumidifiers.
Foundation Repair in Wheeling
The silty loam soil in Wheeling falls victim to the above-average precipitation (41 inches of annual rain and 20 inches of snow). Silty loam soil is a mix of clay, silt, and sand. While this may sound like a strong choice to have around and beneath your home, it leaves your foundation open to several different problems. From washout causing foundation settlement to hydrostatic pressure leading to bowing walls, silty loam soil can cause major problems. Look for foundation walls bowing inward, and sticking doors and windows. Basement Authority of West Virginia has proven solutions like foundation piers, wall braces, and anchors to ensure your home is supported and no longer relies on unstable soils to do so.
Crawl Space Repair & Encapsulation in Wheeling
Crawl spaces lift your home off the damp ground to protect the important structural elements. However, if your Wheeling crawl space is untreated, is it effective? When you consider the 41 inches of annual rain and 20 inches of annual snow, plus the humid summers, your crawl space could be at risk. Look for mold, wood rot, increased pests, or a musty odor. Basement Authority of West Virginia recommends crawl space encapsulation. Using a customizable mix of vapor barriers, thermal wall insulation, sump pumps, and dehumidifiers, we can protect your home’s crawl space and transform it into a clean, dry useable space.
Concrete Lifting & Leveling in Wheeling
Similar to why your foundation sinks, your concrete sinks because of the soil beneath it. The silty loam soil is prone to wash out when it encounters the annual 41 inches of rain and 20 inches of snow. Washout leaves heavy concrete slabs unsupported, and they crack and sink into the void below. The cold winters in Wheeling aren’t helpful either. The freeze-thaw cycle puts pressure on your concrete driveway, sidewalk, and pool deck slabs, causing them to heave, and sink. Leaving you with uneven slabs and a major tripping hazard. Basement Authority of West Virginia uses a polyurethane injection system to lift your sunken slabs. Injected beneath the slab, it stabilizes the soil and lifts your driveway, sidewalk, pool deck, and interior slabs back to their original position. It’s waterproof, eco-friendly, and cures in just 15 minutes.
FAQs
About Waterproofing, Crawl Spaces & Foundation Repair in Beckley, WV
Foundation deterioration can be caused by a variety of sources, but they always fall into one of three categories: pressure, lack of support, or faults. Despite the fact that each of these issues is unique, they nonetheless express themselves in similar ways. The most typical signs of foundation problems include spreading cracks, unevenness, dampness, sinking, and heaving. You may discover secondary issues such as wood rot or mold if the damage to your Clarksburg foundation has been there for some time. Because the symptoms are very consistent regardless of the cause, it is vital to get professional assistance in determining the exact cause and the right treatment.
A basic fault or shortcoming in the building or structure of your Clarksburg property’s foundation is the least likely but most significant underlying reason. Defects can develop as a result of bad design, such as architectural errors, or the use of inferior materials, such as improperly mixed concrete. In either situation, the damage could be difficult to repair, and foundation replacement, in part or in whole, would almost certainly be required. On the other hand, damage caused by pressure, or a lack of support can typically be repaired and avoided.
Only the ground can exert sufficient pressure to cause damage to a structure (and incidentally, issues with support tend to be soil-based as well). The most prevalent soil in West Virginia is Monongahela silt loam, however, it isn’t always kind to foundations. Unfortunately, with time, this type of soil settles, creating a gradual shift in the foundation as well as the production of fractures and structural weaknesses that allow water to access the foundation and cause substantial damage. This type of soil may begin to move if it is continually flooded or drenched. When this happens, the hydrostatic pressure around a house can rise significantly, increasing the likelihood of soil runoff. Both of these issues can lead to foundation deterioration, including fragmentation, sinking, cracking, and lateral displacement.
The freeze-thaw effect describes how water freezes and then thaws again into a liquid form. If you want to minimize structural damage, you must protect the concrete on your Clarksburg property from moisture exposure due to the freeze-thaw phenomenon. When water condenses into ice, it expands by around 9%. Despite appearances, growing ice has the ability to displace concrete particles. The concrete weakens structurally over time when there is any form of displacement.
The freeze-thaw cycle can cause small craters to grow inside and along the surface of the concrete. Concrete is porous to begin with, but moisture seeps through even more with each new micro-tear. As more water travels through the concrete, the freeze-thaw cycle displaces the soil beneath it. You’ll wind up with an uneven, structurally weak slab once the concrete sets. On a slab that has been exposed to moisture over the winter, cracking is unavoidable due to the decreased tensile strength of porous concrete.
The severity of the winter climate dictates how dangerous it is to be exposed to the freeze-thaw cycle. Because some slabs like in sidewalks aren’t considered “heavy-duty,” freeze-thaw has a considerably bigger impact on concrete with low psi. Because it keeps the snow off your concrete throughout the winter, covering it is a vital part of slab protection. This way, if your slab settles, you won’t have to replace it due to breakage that prevents repairs.
Water seeps through cracks in basement walls, usually formed when hydrostatic pressure pushes up against the foundation. For that reason, foundation solutions exist to repair basement walls and keep them supported. Additionally, some basement waterproofing solutions drain water out of your basement to prevent seeping water from causing damage. At Basement Authority, we use wall repair beams and carbon fiber reinforcements to realign your basement walls and close any cracks that may have formed. In conjunction with these repair tools, we also install floor drains and vapor barriers to keep water from leaking into your basement in the first place.
Mold needs two things to grow – relative humidity over 50 percent, and organic material to feed on. Unfortunately, your crawl space is prone to both of these conditions. Most crawl spaces are built with wooden support beams which serve as a food source for mold. Moreover, many crawl spaces are built with open vents and directly above dirt ground. Both of these contribute to rising humidity in your crawl space. Using crawl space encapsulation prevents mold build up by removing moisture from the equation. Vapor barriers, dehumidifiers, crawl space supports, vent covers, and crawl space drains all reduce water damage below your home. When mold has no moisture, it quickly dies.