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Leak Detection Earlsfield

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

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

Local knowledge

Earlsfield housing, from a leak engineer's side

Earlsfield is a compact grid of late-Victorian terraces built between Garratt Lane and the River Wandle, with the Magdalen Park conservation area holding some of the most consistent terraced streets in the borough. Almost every house here has been extended into the side return to enlarge the kitchen, which is precisely where the original rear-wall pipe run gets buried under a solid floor, making it the leading leak point locally. Proximity to the Wandle and a high water table means below-ground damp is a frequent complicating factor, so distinguishing a plumbing leak from rising or ground water matters. Purpose-built flats near the station add shared risers and concealed pipework to the picture.

Engineer's note

Near the Wandle we always separate pipe water from ground water before recommending any digging, because the high water table here fools a visual inspection. Moisture mapping plus thermal survey tells us which we are dealing with, and only then do we open anything. Non-invasive first, fixed fee at booking, no trace no fee.

Covered in Earlsfield

  • 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 Earlsfield

01

Side-return leak under Magdalen Park kitchens

The Magdalen Park streets are almost uniformly extended into the side return, sealing the hot and cold run that crosses the original back wall under a solid extension floor. A weeping joint there tracks through the screed and shows as damp on the party wall or in the hall, away from the source. We trace the buried junction with thermal and acoustic detection and isolate the supply, so the correct section of the new kitchen floor is lifted once rather than opened on guesswork.

02

Distinguishing plumbing leaks from Wandle ground water

With the River Wandle close by and a high local water table, ground and rising damp in Earlsfield's lower floors is easily mistaken for a plumbing leak, and the reverse is just as costly. We use moisture mapping and thermal survey to establish whether water is arriving from a pressurised pipe or from the ground, which prevents a dry, sound pipe being needlessly dug out. Getting that distinction right first is where a proper non-invasive trace earns its keep.

03

Underfloor heating pinhole in solid extension floor

The rebuilt Earlsfield kitchens commonly run wet underfloor heating in a solid screed. A slow, unexplained drop in boiler pressure points to a pinhole in one buried loop rather than a visible drip. We pressure-test the manifold circuits to isolate the failing loop, then thermal-survey the slab to mark the leak within a small area, so the screed is broken out once and the reinstatement stays modest. The detection fee is agreed before we begin.

04

Shared riser leaks in station-side flats

The purpose-built blocks near Earlsfield station run communal cold-water risers through several flats. A tired joint on the riser leaks into the cavity and surfaces in a flat below rather than the one containing the fault, leaving neighbours unsure who is responsible. We trace the riser across the affected flats, isolate it the same day where access allows, and provide a trace and access report the managing agent and insurer can rely on.

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 Earlsfield — FAQs

How quickly can you attend a leak in Earlsfield?

Same-day appointments are usually available in Earlsfield and across Wandsworth, 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 Earlsfield?

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 Earlsfield properties?

Yes — Earlsfield is a compact grid of late-Victorian terraces built between Garratt Lane and the River Wandle, with the Magdalen Park conservation area holding some of the most consistent terraced streets in the borough. Almost every house here has been extended into the side return to enlarge the kitchen, which is precisely where the original rear-wall pipe run gets buried under a solid floor, making it the leading leak point locally. Proximity to the Wandle and a high water table means below-ground damp is a frequent complicating factor, so distinguishing a plumbing leak from rising or ground water matters. Purpose-built flats near the station add shared risers and concealed pipework to the picture.

Can you provide a report for my insurer?

Every Earlsfield 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

Earlsfield & Wandsworth

Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors.

Losing water in Earlsfield?

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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020 7123 8560