Foundation Repair Across Saskatoon
A citywide service for a citywide problem
Saskatoon is a city of roughly 317,000 people and about 125,000 homes, and almost all of them sit on the same challenge: Saskatchewan's expansive clay soil. From the century-old foundations of Nutana and City Park to the freshly graded lots of Stonebridge and Evergreen, the clay swells in spring, shrinks in summer, and works foundations loose year after year. We repair foundations across the entire city.
Saskatoon's soil and climate, and your foundation
The local "gumbo" clay is the root cause of most foundation movement here. It expands when wet and contracts when dry, while the -40C to +35C temperature range adds freeze-thaw heaving. Because the frost line reaches about 6 ft down, the only durable fix for settlement is support that goes below it. That is why we install helical and push piers rather than surface patches that sit in the moving zone.
Old neighbourhoods, new suburbs, same clay
Saskatoon's housing stock spans more than a century. The older river-adjacent neighbourhoods have foundations that have weathered decades of clay cycles and are now showing cracks, settlement and bowing walls. The newer suburbs were built on graded clay that is still finding its level, so even recent homes settle. We handle both, matching the method to the home's age, foundation type and soil.
Foundation services across Saskatoon
- Foundation crack repair (polyurethane injection)
- Helical piles and underpinning for settlement
- House leveling for sloping floors
- Bowing wall repair (carbon fiber and wall anchors)
- Basement waterproofing and drainage
Permits handled
Structural foundation work in Saskatoon requires a building permit from the City of Saskatoon. We pull it as part of the job, so your repair is documented and code-compliant. We are licensed and insured, and our work carries a written warranty.
Services in Saskatoon
- Foundation Crack Repair
- Helical Piles
- Underpinning
- House Leveling
- Bowing Wall Repair
- Basement Waterproofing
Foundation concern in Saskatoon?