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Leak Detection Edmonton

Hidden water leaks in Edmonton pinpointed without opening floors or walls — acoustic, thermal imaging and tracer gas detection with no find, no fee, from engineers who know Edmonton buildings.

No find, no fee Same-day in Edmonton Insurer-ready reports

Local knowledge

Edmonton housing, from a leak engineer's side

Edmonton is built from long Victorian and Edwardian terraces along the older roads, interwar semis further out, and substantial 1960s and 1970s council estates including low-rise blocks and maisonettes. The terraces carry original back-additions where kitchens and bathrooms were bolted on, and the estate flats share screeded floor voids and communal risers. Leaks hide here because heating was extended room by room over generations, burying joints under solid kitchen floors, while ageing lead and early copper mains corrode quietly behind plaster. In the estates, a single failed connection in a screed zone can travel between dwellings before it ever becomes visible.

Engineer's note

Across Edmonton's terraces and estates I treat the back-addition and the screed void as the usual suspects. Per-circuit pressure testing isolates the failing run, thermal imaging picks up buried heating, and tracer gas confirms joints under solid floors. In estate flats I keep communal disruption low and hand over an insurer-ready trace and access report.

Covered in Edmonton

  • Hidden leaks under floors and in walls
  • Underground supply pipe leaks
  • Central heating and boiler pressure loss
  • Underfloor heating loop leaks
  • Flat-to-flat leak origin investigations
  • Trace & access reports for insurance claims

What fails here

Common leak problems in Edmonton

01

Leaks in Victorian back-addition kitchens

Edmonton's terraces almost all have a rear back-addition holding the kitchen and bathroom, with pipework that has been extended and re-routed many times. Old joints end up under solid floors laid over the original quarry tiles. A weep here spreads under the screed and shows as rising damp on the party wall. We pressure test the run, then use tracer gas beneath the slab to find the joint without lifting the whole floor.

02

Communal riser and screed leaks in estate flats

The borough's 1960s and 1970s blocks route heating and supply through shared risers and screeded floor voids. A failed connection can send water into the flat below or along a corridor before anyone spots it. Access through communal areas needs care and coordination. We isolate the affected circuit, survey with thermal imaging and confirm with tracer gas, producing a clear trace and access report the managing agent can act on.

03

Corroded lead and early copper mains

Many Edmonton terraces still run on lead or first-generation copper supply pipe that has thinned with age. A pinhole leak on the incoming main weeps into the sub-floor or the front garden, often mistaken for groundwater. The clue is a mains pressure that never quite holds. We trace the supply line acoustically from the stopcock and pinpoint the leak so a single section can be renewed rather than the whole run.

04

Waste and soil pipe leaks below solid floors

Bathrooms relocated during modernisation often left soil and waste runs cast into solid ground-floor slabs. A hairline crack seeps slowly, and the first sign is a persistent smell or damp skirting rather than a visible flow. We run a dye and tracer through the drainage, survey the floor thermally to map the wet zone, and mark the exact break so the repair stays targeted.

Three methods, one marked point

Acoustic survey

Ground microphones and correlators follow the sound of escaping water through floors and ground.

Thermal imaging

Infrared cameras reveal wet patches and buried heating runs through the floor surface.

Tracer gas

A safe hydrogen mix escapes through the exact failure point and rises to our surface detector.

Leak detection in Edmonton — FAQs

How quickly can you attend a leak in Edmonton?

Same-day appointments are usually available in Edmonton and across Enfield, and next-day almost always. If water is actively escaping, say so when you book — live leaks are prioritised and we can talk you through isolating the supply while the engineer travels.

What does leak detection cost in Edmonton?

A fixed fee agreed at booking — typically £250–£450 for a domestic detection visit — covered by no find, no fee. That includes pressure testing per circuit, thermal imaging, acoustic survey and moisture mapping. Repairs are quoted separately before any work starts.

Do you know Edmonton properties?

Yes — Edmonton is built from long Victorian and Edwardian terraces along the older roads, interwar semis further out, and substantial 1960s and 1970s council estates including low-rise blocks and maisonettes. The terraces carry original back-additions where kitchens and bathrooms were bolted on, and the estate flats share screeded floor voids and communal risers. Leaks hide here because heating was extended room by room over generations, burying joints under solid kitchen floors, while ageing lead and early copper mains corrode quietly behind plaster. In the estates, a single failed connection in a screed zone can travel between dwellings before it ever becomes visible.

Can you provide a report for my insurer?

Every Edmonton detection visit can produce an insurer-ready trace and access report — cause, precise origin, methods used, moisture map and photos — typically within 48 hours.

Where we work

Edmonton & Enfield

Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors.

Losing water in Edmonton?

Tell us the symptoms and your postcode. Fixed detection fee, agreed arrival window, no find no fee — confirmed before you book.

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Leak Detection 24/7
020 7123 8560