Foundation Inspections in Center City, PA

A Foundation inspection is when a structural engineer assesses your building's foundation to identify problems and estimate repair costs. You need this before buying a property to know what you're getting into, before planning a renovation so your architect knows what they're working with, or when you've discovered problems like cracks in walls, doors sticking, floors sloping, or water coming through the basement. Most Fishtown rowhouses are 100-150 years old with stone or brick foundations from the 1800s-1950s. These foundations were fine when built but often show deterioration now from lime mortar crumbling, stones separating, freeze-thaw damage, or settlement from inadequate footings. The engineer accesses your basement and crawlspace, measures cracks, tests mortar condition, checks for water infiltration, documents settlement, and assesses whether the foundation is structurally adequate. You get an 8-15 page report with photos, detailed findings, and repair recommendations with cost estimates.

Make Safe Permits

Certified Civil Engineer

Fully Licensed & Insured

Certified Structural Engineer

What to Expect With Foundation Inspections
  • Timeline: 2-4 hours on-site, report delivered in 3-5 days (or 24-48 hours expedited for premium). We need access to basement and crawlspace areas. Some Fishtown rowhouses have 3-foot crawlspaces that require hands-and-knees access. We can't inspect areas behind finished drywall without cutting holes. Any standing water must be pumped out before inspection since it prevents us from seeing foundation conditions.
  • Best inspection timing: April-May or October-November. Heavy rain makes it hard to tell chronic infiltration from temporary storm water. Freeze-thaw cycles in winter reveal damage that's hidden in summer. Moderate weather periods provide the clearest picture of actual conditions.
  • Access requirements: basement or crawlspace entry, working flashlight (we bring backup), ideally no furniture blocking foundation walls. If the property is occupied, we coordinate with tenants or the seller's agent. Most pre-purchase inspections happen when the property is vacant, or we coordinate access through your realtor.
Foundation Inspections
Why Foundation Inspections Matters
  • Pre-purchase inspections save major money. Fishtown rowhouses sell for $350,000-$550,000. Foundation problems are commonly hidden behind finished basements: rear wall bowing ($25,000-$45,000 repair), stone foundation disintegrating ($40,000-$80,000), chronic water infiltration ($8,000-$25,000 to fix properly plus $5,000-$15,000 mold remediation). A foundation inspection before purchase identifies these issues so you can negotiate 50-75% of repair costs off the purchase price or walk away. Without the inspection, you discover the problems after closing when you own them.
  • Foundation failure during renovation kills projects. You're $120,000 into a $250,000 renovation budget when your contractor opens walls and discovers foundation problems. Walls start collapsing mid-excavation, requiring $15,000-$25,000 in emergency shoring plus $30,000-$60,000 for a new foundation wall. Now you need additional capital you don't have or you abandon the project and lose everything invested. A foundation inspection before renovation identifies problems upfront so your budget is realistic with no surprises.
  • Chronic water infiltration destroys property value. You can't sell a property with active water damage because buyers won't get mortgages and home inspections kill deals. Mold from water creates health hazards. Fixing it properly requires exterior excavation, waterproofing, and drainage ($8,000-$25,000). Cheap interior fixes don't work—painting walls with waterproof coating just hides the water while mold grows behind the coating.
Why Foundation Inspections Matters
How StrucTech Handles Foundation Inspections
  • We've completed 47+ foundation inspections in Fishtown and know the typical problems in 1800s-1950s stone and brick foundations: lime mortar deteriorating with stones separating, inadequate footings where foundations bear directly on soil, rear addition differential settlement where additions settle faster than main houses, and party wall issues where neighboring buildings lean on shared walls.
  • We've completed 47+ foundation inspections in Fishtown and know the typical problems in 1800s-1950s stone and brick foundations: lime mortar deteriorating with stones separating, inadequate footings where foundations bear directly on soil, rear addition differential settlement where additions settle faster than main houses, and party wall issues where neighboring buildings lean on shared walls.
  • Reports include repair cost estimates based on actual Philadelphia GC pricing. We don't write vague recommendations like "recommend repairs." We write specific estimates like "Rear wall bowing 3 inches outward at mid-height. Requires excavation, installation of helical tiebacks, rebuilding top 4 feet of wall. Estimated cost: $28,000-$38,000 based on current Philadelphia rates for this scope." You can budget accurately, get competitive GC bids using our estimate as a baseline, or negotiate purchase price knowing actual repair costs.
How StrucTech Handles Foundation Inspections
Common Questions About Foundation Inspections
How long does foundation inspection take?
2-4 hours on-site for typical Fishtown rowhouse. Larger buildings like twins or detached houses take longer. Report delivered 3-5 days after inspection (standard) or 24-48 hours expedited (premium). Report includes executive summary, detailed findings, 100-200 annotated photos, and prioritized repair recommendations with cost estimates.
What can't you assess during inspection?
Cannot assess: conditions hidden behind finished drywall (must remove drywall to see the foundation wall), soil conditions without geotechnical boring (soil bearing capacity, depth to bedrock, groundwater elevation), or structural capacity for additions without load calculations (that's a separate structural load analysis service). Can assess: visible foundation conditions, crack patterns, settlement, water infiltration evidence, mortar deterioration, and structural defects.
What happens to the inspection report?
You own the report (the buyer in a pre-purchase scenario). Use it for price negotiation with the seller, share it with your architect for renovation planning, or provide it to general contractors for competitive repair bids. The report is yours to use however you need.
Can you inspect in winter months?
Yes, but freeze-thaw cycles can actually be helpful for identifying certain types of damage. However, frozen ground and extreme cold can limit some aspects of assessment. Best inspection windows are spring (April-May) and fall (October-November) when weather is moderate and you can see both wet and dry season conditions.
What if inspection finds major problems?
We categorize by severity: immediate safety hazards versus significant deterioration versus minor maintenance. For pre-purchase, it's typical to negotiate 50-75% of estimated repair costs off the purchase price. For pre-renovation, incorporate repairs into your project budget from the start. If the problems make the project financially unviable, you know before committing significant capital.

Our Simple Step by Step Process

Reliable Structural Engineering & Inspection Services handled start to finish.

DISCOVER WHAT Center City, PA CUSTOMERS HAVE TO SAY ABOUT StrucTech

OUR REVIEWS

REVIEW US

ON GOOGLE

Where We Provide

Foundation Inspections

  • Center City, PA

  • Northern Liberties, PA

  • University City, PA

  • Main Line, PA

  • Graduate Hospital & Point Breeze, PA

  • South Philadelphia, PA

  • Center City, PA

  • Old City & Society Hill, PA

  • Manayunk & Roxborough, PA

  • Kensington & Port Richmond, PA

Other Services We Provide

Need something else? Check out the

other services we offer for Structural Engineering & Inspection Services.

What We Can Help You With.

Our Services

Special inspections

Special inspections are when a licensed structural engineer monitors your construction project to verify the work matches approved drawings and meets code requirements. Philadelphia requires this for any project using structural steel beams, concrete slabs, high-strength bolts, or structural welding. The inspector visits your site at critical stages during construction, documents what the contractor built, catches problems before they're covered up, and provides certification to L&I when the work is done. Without this certification, L&I won't issue your Certificate of Occupancy and you can't sell or rent the building. Most Fishtown projects over two stories need special inspections, and your architect lists exactly which inspections are required when they submit your permit application.

Learn More →
Underpinning Inspection

An Underpinning inspection is when a structural engineer monitors excavation work next to existing buildings to make sure neighboring properties don't collapse or settle. Philadelphia requires this whenever you dig deeper than 5 feet within 10 feet of an adjacent structure, which is basically every basement excavation in Fishtown's narrow rowhouse lots. Your contractor digs in small sections, pours concrete to support the neighbor's foundation in each section, then moves to the next section. This process repeats 16-24 times for a typical rowhouse. The engineer must be on-site during excavation and concrete placement for every single section to verify the work protects adjacent buildings. Without this documentation, L&I won't issue your Certificate of Occupancy, and if your neighbor's building settles or collapses, you're liable for all damages.

Learn More →
Foundation Inspections

A Foundation inspection is when a structural engineer assesses your building's foundation to identify problems and estimate repair costs. You need this before buying a property to know what you're getting into, before planning a renovation so your architect knows what they're working with, or when you've discovered problems like cracks in walls, doors sticking, floors sloping, or water coming through the basement. Most Fishtown rowhouses are 100-150 years old with stone or brick foundations from the 1800s-1950s. These foundations were fine when built but often show deterioration now from lime mortar crumbling, stones separating, freeze-thaw damage, or settlement from inadequate footings. The engineer accesses your basement and crawlspace, measures cracks, tests mortar condition, checks for water infiltration, documents settlement, and assesses whether the foundation is structurally adequate. You get an 8-15 page report with photos, detailed findings, and repair recommendations with cost estimates.

Learn More →
Make Safe Permits

Make safe permits are emergency L&I permits required when a building partially collapses, shows imminent collapse signs, or gets red-tagged as unsafe. When L&I red-tags a building under Section 110, you must obtain a make safe permit to perform emergency stabilization work like installing shoring, bracing walls, removing dangerous elements, or partial demolition. This permit requires a Pennsylvania-licensed structural engineer to design the emergency work, provide stamped drawings, supervise the stabilization, and certify completion to L&I. The make safe permit is processed on an emergency basis, typically issued within 24-48 hours rather than the normal 2-4 week permit review. Philadelphia averages 300 building collapses per year, many in Fishtown from adjacent excavation damage, roof overloading, fire damage, or century-old buildings deteriorating. Most make safe permit applications happen between 11pm and 3am when buildings collapse during construction, storms, or snow loading events.

Learn More →
Emergency Structural Engineering

Emergency structural engineering is the immediate response when your contractor discovers structural failure during renovation, a load-bearing element fails unexpectedly, or you need same-day structural assessment to keep your project moving. This is when you call us directly because your contractor removed what they thought was a non-load-bearing wall and the second floor sagged 2 inches, opened a wall and found severe termite damage, discovered the existing beam is undersized for the addition you're building, or noticed floor joists rotting where they meet the foundation. In Fishtown's 1800s-1950s rowhouses, contractors frequently discover hidden structural problems during demolition because previous homeowners covered problems with drywall rather than fixing them. The engineer responds within 2-4 hours, assesses damage on-site, designs temporary stabilization for the same day so your contractor can continue working tomorrow, and provides permanent repair drawings within 3-7 days so your project stays on schedule.

Learn More →
Slab Inspection

Mat slab inspection is the code-required inspection by a structural engineer before your contractor pours the foundation slab for new construction or basement excavation projects. Philadelphia Building Code Table 1705.3 requires special inspection of concrete reinforcement placement for most projects, with limited exceptions for simple 1-2 story buildings. Most Fishtown new construction like 3-4 story townhouses and Front Street mixed-use buildings require mat slab inspection. Your contractor excavates to foundation depth, installs vapor barrier and compacted stone base, places reinforcing steel in a rebar grid, and calls the engineer for inspection. The engineer arrives before concrete trucks (typically 6:30am for 7am pour), inspects rebar size, spacing, and cover distances, verifies excavation depth and preparation, approves or identifies corrections, and documents with photos. The contractor proceeds with concrete pour only after engineer approval, and the engineer submits a report to L&I for the permit file.

Learn More →
Concrete & Rebar Inspection

Concrete and rebar inspection is the special inspection required by Philadelphia Building Code Table 1705.3 for elevated slabs, concrete columns, concrete walls, beams, and any structural concrete element beyond simple ground-level foundations. Most Fishtown new construction projects require multiple concrete inspections throughout construction as each floor or structural element is formed and poured. This is different from mat slab inspection which is a one-time inspection before foundation pour. Concrete and rebar inspection happens repeatedly during construction as each floor slab, column, or wall is built. Your contractor builds formwork (temporary wooden forms that hold wet concrete), installs reinforcing steel per structural drawings, calls the engineer for inspection before pouring, and the engineer approves so concrete can be placed. This repeats for each floor slab, each column, and each wall that contains structural concrete, typically requiring 3-8 inspections for a 3-story Fishtown townhouse or 12-24+ inspections for larger buildings.

Learn More →
Structural Steel Inspection

Structural steel inspection is the special inspection required by Philadelphia Building Code Table 1705.2 when your project uses steel beams, columns, or structural frames. Most Fishtown renovation projects remove load-bearing walls to create open floor plans by installing steel I-beams to support the second floor. Most Front Street new construction uses structural steel frames with steel beams and columns supporting concrete slabs in 4-6 story mixed-use buildings. Table 1705.2 distinguishes between continuous inspection where the engineer is on-site during the entire operation (required for welded moment connections and high-strength bolted connections) and periodic inspection with scheduled visits (allowed for standard bolted connections and simple welds). Your contractor orders steel from a fabricator, steel is delivered to site, a crane lifts beams into place, connections are bolted or welded, and the engineer inspects at multiple stages. Typical steel projects require 2-4 inspections for small residential beam installations to 12-24+ inspections for large multi-story steel frame buildings.

Learn More →
Facade Inspection (5-Year)

Facade inspection is the code-required inspection every 5 years for buildings over 3 stories or 40 feet tall per Philadelphia Code Chapter 14-1600. This applies to many Fishtown buildings including converted mills that are 4-6 stories, Front Street mixed-use developments that are 4-8 stories, and some taller rowhouses with pilot-house construction pushing height over 40 feet. A Pennsylvania-licensed Professional Engineer or Registered Architect must inspect the entire building exterior including walls, parapets, cornices, balconies, fire escapes, signs, and awnings looking for deterioration, loose elements, cracks, spalling where concrete or brick breaks off, and any conditions that could cause falling debris. The inspection requires close-up access using aerial lift, scaffolding, or rope access for tall buildings, photo documentation of all defects, and a stamped report submitted to L&I certifying the building is safe or identifying required repairs. Buildings overdue for inspection receive L&I violations with accumulating fines until inspection is complete.

Learn More →
Excavation Shoring Inspection

Excavation shoring inspection is the code-required monitoring by a structural engineer when your contractor digs deeper than 5 feet and uses temporary support systems called shoring to prevent cave-ins. OSHA and Philadelphia Building Code require shoring for excavations over 5 feet deep or when excavating near existing structures to prevent soil from collapsing into the excavation, protect workers from being buried alive, and prevent adjacent buildings from settling. Most Fishtown basement excavations that lower basement floors to add ceiling height or dig new basements under existing buildings require shoring because you're digging 8-12 feet deep and working within inches of adjacent rowhouse foundations. Typical shoring systems are steel sheet piling with interlocking steel sheets driven into ground, soldier piles and lagging with vertical steel beams and horizontal wood planks, or trench boxes as steel cages protecting workers inside excavation. Your contractor installs shoring, the engineer inspects before excavation proceeds, the engineer monitors during excavation, and the engineer certifies shoring performed adequately.

Learn More →
Structural Load Analysis

Structural load analysis is the engineering calculation required when you're adding loads to an existing building or when your architect needs to verify existing structure can support proposed changes. Most Fishtown renovation projects involve structural modifications like removing walls between living room and kitchen to create open floor plan requiring beam to carry second floor load, adding third-floor addition or pilot house where existing structure must support additional story, converting rowhouse to multi-unit rental with heavier occupancy loads, or building rooftop deck where existing roof structure designed for snow only not people and furniture and planters. The engineer calculates existing structural capacity, calculates new loads being added, determines if existing structure is adequate, and designs strengthening if needed with new beams, columns, or foundation upgrades. Deliverables are stamped structural drawings showing required modifications and calculations for L&I permit review. This service is separate from inspection services which verify contractor builds what's on the drawings.

Learn More →
Building Structural Assessment

Building structural assessment is the comprehensive evaluation of your entire building's structural system before major renovations, after discovering problems, for property purchase due diligence, or when converting building use. Most Fishtown building assessments happen when developers buy older rowhouses sight-unseen at auction needing to know actual repair costs before committing capital, architects discover hidden damage during design phase like opened walls and found termite damage or rotted framing or previous unpermitted modifications, or property owners plan gut renovations wanting to know what structural surprises await before setting budgets. The engineer inspects foundation to roof including basement walls and floor framing and load-bearing walls and roof structure, identifies all structural deficiencies, categorizes by severity, and provides repair recommendations with cost estimates. This is different from foundation inspection which focuses only on foundation or pre-purchase home inspection which is general not structural-specific. Building structural assessment is engineering-level detailed inspection with stamped report typically 30-80 pages.

Learn More →

Not sure what you need?

Call us at +1 267-310-1172 and we'll help you figure it out.

Ready to Move Forward?

If you need Foundation Inspections

or unsure and have questions let's talk.

We'll answer your questions, provide a clear estimate, and schedule a time that works for you.

Unable to find form