Built for Fairfax
Why Local Knowledge Matters in Fairfax Restoration
Fairfax County's housing stock spans 70 years and four distinct construction eras — each with its own plumbing, insulation, and structural characteristics. The 1950s–70s ramblers and Colonials in Mantua, Kings Park West, and Springfield have galvanized supply lines we classify as Category 2 contamination when they fail. The 1980s polybutylene pipe era is heavily concentrated in Burke Centre and Centreville. The 1990s–2000s townhome clusters in Chantilly and Fair Oaks have flat-roof condensate drain issues we see seasonally. The custom estates in McLean and Vienna have high-value contents, original hardwood, and in older properties, asbestos and lead paint concerns that change our pre-demolition protocol.
We serve McLean, Vienna, Reston, Herndon, Burke, Springfield, Centreville, Annandale, Chantilly, Fair Oaks, and Oakton with full restoration capability — every job documented for Fairfax County permit compliance and Virginia contractor licensing requirements, with daily moisture readings and a scope your adjuster can defend.
Properties near Accotink Creek and Bull Run tributaries sit in FEMA flood zone AE — elevated risk after heavy rain events that we map and document at first response. The Occoquan water system (7–10 grains hardness) accelerates galvanized pipe corrosion in older homes, which is why we check fittings before drywall. We work directly with USAA, Allstate, State Farm, and every other major Northern Virginia carrier — structuring scope documentation to support your coverage rather than create friction with it.