A damaged sewer line is one of the most stressful problems a homeowner can face. In the past, fixing it meant bringing in an excavator and destroying your lawn. We offer a better way. We are Birmingham, MI’s leaders in sewer & drain solutions, moving from simple cleaning to advanced trenchless sewer line replacement. We fix the pipe underground with minimal digging, saving your property and your patience.
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Snaking a drain only punches a hole through the clog; it doesn't clean the pipe. We use hydro-jetting, which blasts high-pressure water into the line. This scours the pipe walls, removing grease, scale, and invasive tree roots. It is the most effective way to prevent recurring drain clogs.
Before we dig or repair, we look. We feed a high-definition sewer camera into your cleanout to visually inspect the inside of the pipe. We look for root intrusion, bellies (sags), cracks, or offsets. This diagnostic step allows us to recommend the exact repair needed—whether it's a simple cleaning or a structural repair.
If your sewer line is failing due to roots or cracks, you don't always need to dig it up. We use Cured-In-Place Pipe (CIPP) lining. We pull a resin-coated liner into the damaged pipe and inflate it. Once it cures, it forms a rock-hard, jointless pipe-within-a-pipe that is guaranteed to last for decades. This "no-dig" solution is faster, cleaner, and often more cost-effective than excavation.
Don't let a sewer problem destroy your yard. Choose the modern, minimally invasive solution that fixes the pipe for good.
"I was quoted $15k to dig up my driveway. These guys did the trenchless liner method for less and my driveway is untouched. Incredible."
"The camera showed tree roots growing right through the pipe. They jetted them out and lined the pipe. No backups since!"
"Very professional crew. They explained the whole process and finished the job in one day. Highly recommended."
The area comprising what is now the city of Birmingham was part of land ceded by Native American tribes to the United States government by the 1807 Treaty of Detroit. However, settlement was delayed, first by the War of 1812. Afterward the Surveyor-General of the United States, Edward Tiffin, made an unfavorable report regarding the placement of Military Bounty Lands for veterans of the War of 1812. Tiffin's report claimed that, because of marsh, in this area "There would not be an acre out of a hundred, if there would be one out of a thousand that would, in any case, admit cultivation." In 1818, Territorial Governor Lewis Cass led a group of men along the Indian Trail. The governor's party discovered that the swamp was not as extensive as Tiffin had supposed. Not long after Cass issued a more encouraging report about the land, interest quickened as to its suitability for settlement.
Zip Codes in Birmingham, MI that we also serve: 48009 48012