Cracked walls, bowing block, wet basements, settled corners across Monona, including Monona Drive, Maywood, Frostwoods. Free inspection within the week, written quote before any work starts, lifetime warranty on the repair.
Quick answer: We dispatch to Monona for foundation crack repair, basement waterproofing, helical pier underpinning, carbon-fiber wall stabilization, sump-pump installs, and egress windows. Free inspection on every job, posted pricing, lifetime warranty on the structural repair. Most Monona calls reach our tech in 25 to 35 minutes.
Monona's mid-century housing stock — primarily 1950s and 1960s ranches built on Lake Monona's south shore — carries a foundation problem unique to the era: poured-concrete walls cast at lower strengths than current code, with cold joints at every 8-foot pour break. After six decades of freeze-thaw cycles, those cold joints become the predictable point of seepage. We see the same diagonal-crack-from-cold-joint pattern in roughly half the Monona homes we inspect, and the standard fix — polyurethane injection from the inside, paired with exterior dimple-board waterproofing if the homeowner is also re-grading the yard — gets the same result in roughly the same dollar range on house after house.
High share of repeat-pattern cold-joint repairs. Predictable scheduling and predictable pricing.
Monona Drive · Maywood · Frostwoods · Belle Isle
53713, 53716
Monona-area pricing matches our service-wide ranges: $400 to $800 per crack for polyurethane and epoxy injection, $500 to $800 per carbon-fiber strap on bowing walls, $1,500 to $2,500 per helical pier on settlement work, and $70 to $110 per linear foot for interior drain tile. A single-issue job in Monona typically lands $1,500 to $8,000, a whole-system fix $12,000 to $35,000. Free inspection, written quote before the work starts.
Most Monona calls reach our tech in 25-35 minutes. Free inspection booked within the week, usually within three business days. Active water-intrusion emergencies get a same-day response on the 24/7 line.
Monona's mid-century housing stock — primarily 1950s and 1960s ranches built on Lake Monona's south shore — carries a foundation problem unique to the era: poured-concrete walls cast at lower strengths than current code, with cold joints at every 8-foot pour break. After six decades of freeze-thaw cycles, those cold joints become the predictable point of seepage. We see the same diagonal-crack-from-cold-joint pattern in roughly half the Monona homes we inspect, and the standard fix — polyurethane injection from the inside, paired with exterior dimple-board waterproofing if the homeowner is also re-grading the yard — gets the same result in roughly the same dollar range on house after house.
Yes. The Dane County building inspector requires a stamped plan on any structural foundation work, and we handle the engineering relationship in-house. The $250 to $400 fee is called out as a separate line on the quote, never bundled silently into the project price. We pull the permit before the crew shows up, not after.
High share of repeat-pattern cold-joint repairs. Predictable scheduling and predictable pricing.