Columbia Tree Removal Pros

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Tree Roots Damaging Foundation
in Columbia, SC

In Columbia's older neighborhoods, you will find large water oaks and willow oaks planted close to houses decades ago. Those trees are beautiful until the roots start working under the slab or lifting the sidewalk. The clay soil under most of Columbia shrinks in dry summers and swells in wet winters, and roots speed that cycle up and make it uneven.

Quick Answer

Tree roots in Columbia follow moisture, and they find it under your foundation and in your plumbing lines. The heavy clay soil here swells when wet and shrinks when dry, and roots make that movement worse by drawing out water unevenly. Removing the tree and cutting the roots back is the only way to stop the damage from continuing. The longer you wait, the more repair work the foundation contractor faces.

Tree Roots Damaging Foundation in Columbia

Telltale Signs

Warning Signs to Watch For

  • Cracks in the slab or brick veneer near the base of a large nearby tree
  • Doors or windows that have suddenly started sticking or not latching
  • Visible roots running along the surface toward the house foundation
  • Plumbing backups that started after a dry summer with no other explanation
  • Raised or cracked concrete on the driveway or sidewalk near a tree

Root Causes

What Causes Tree Roots Damaging Foundation?

1

Clay Soil Moisture Depletion

Large trees in Columbia pull hundreds of gallons of water out of the clay soil every day during a dry summer. That drying shrinks the clay directly under the foundation unevenly, and the slab drops in spots, which cracks it.

The Fix

Tree Removal and Root Barrier Installation

Removing the tree stops the moisture depletion at the source. A root barrier trench keeps any remaining roots from moving back toward the foundation.

2

Direct Root Pressure On Foundation

Roots do not break concrete by force alone. They find an existing small crack, grow into it, and then thicken over years until the crack opens wider. Water oaks planted in Forest Acres and similar neighborhoods in the 1970s are now large enough for this to be a real problem.

The Fix

Tree Removal With Root Zone Excavation

We remove the tree, then excavate to expose and cut the roots that have grown under or against the foundation. The foundation contractor can then assess the damage without roots in the way.

3

Root Intrusion Into Sewer Lines

Older homes in Columbia, especially those built before 1970, often have clay tile sewer lines. Roots smell the moisture and nutrients and grow right through the joints in those old pipes, causing recurring backups.

The Fix

Tree Removal and Root Clearing

Removing the tree kills the root mass over time, but the roots already in the pipe need to be cut out by a plumber. We handle the tree side of the problem.

Self-Diagnosis

Which Cause Applies to You?

Check the signs you're observing to narrow down the likely root cause before your inspection.

What You're Seeing Clay Soil Moisture Depletion Direct Root Pressure On Foundation Root Intrusion Into Sewer Lines
Foundation cracks appearing or widening during dry summers
Visible root running along top of soil directly toward foundation wall
Slow drains or sewage backups in lowest fixtures of the house
Concrete slab raised unevenly on the side closest to the tree
Cracks showing a stepped pattern along mortar joints in brick