Plumber in Webb Bridge
Webb Bridge covers established 1990s subdivisions in central Alpharetta. Slab-on-grade housing with the same plumbing fingerprint as Windward, slab leak frequency, polybutylene on many homes, copper supply lines aging.
Webb Bridge corridor includes a number of established 1990s subdivisions. Slab-on-grade foundations on expansive clay soil drive the same slab leak frequency we see in Windward. Polybutylene is present on a meaningful share of homes; copper on others.
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The call we run most often in Webb Bridge
Webb Bridge has the same dominant call pattern as Windward: slab leak diagnostics and spot repairs on aging copper supply lines embedded in slab. The Webb Bridge corridor includes several 1990s subdivisions, all built on similar lot configurations with similar plumbing material choices, and all hitting the same milestones at the same time.
What's slightly different from Windward is the lot size and access. Webb Bridge lots tend to be smaller, garages are often attached, and meter pits are usually closer to the street. That affects how we plan trenchless service line work when a slab leak diagnostic also surfaces a polybutylene service line that needs to come out.
Why this shows up more here than average
Webb Bridge homes sit in the same 1990s slab-construction window that drives slab leak frequency across this whole part of North Fulton. The mechanism is the same: copper supply lines embedded in or running through the slab, decades of moderately aggressive chlorinated water chemistry working on the interior pipe wall, eventual pinhole development.
What we sometimes see in Webb Bridge that we don't see as much in Windward: simultaneous issues. A home will develop a slab leak and also have its polybutylene service line approaching end of life. The diagnostic visit surfaces both, and the conversation shifts from "fix the slab leak" to "fix the slab leak now, plan the service line replacement in the next six months."
Catching it early vs. catching it late
Catching it early in Webb Bridge follows the same logic as Windward: watch the water bill monthly, walk the house feeling for warm floor spots, listen for running water with everything off. The three-symptom pattern is the same.
For Webb Bridge homes that have already had one slab leak resolved, the question of whether to plan a whole-home repipe is sharper than for homes elsewhere. The argument against: the rest of the system might run another decade. The argument for: chasing slab leaks one at a time costs more than a single repipe project, and Webb Bridge homes that have had two leaks in 18 months are now into the pattern. We give you our honest read after the diagnostic.
When the early symptom isn't actually the problem
The diagnostic complication on Webb Bridge calls. Because polybutylene service lines and slab leaks both produce bill-spike signals, distinguishing them on the first visit matters. The diagnostic test is meter-side isolation: close the main shutoff inside the house. If the meter still moves with the main closed, the leak is on the service line side. If the meter stops, the leak is interior.
For interior leaks, the next isolation is by zone: turn off the hot water supply at the heater. If the meter stops on hot-only isolation, the leak is on a hot supply line. Combined with thermal and acoustic confirmation, that points to a specific run rather than a general area.
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