Sump Pump Installation
in Langley, BC
Langley encompasses both Langley City — a small, densely developed municipality with established residential neighbourhoods — and the much larger Langley Township, where residential development spans from urban infill near Willowbrook to rural acreage properties in Brookswood, Salmon River, and Aldergrove. Crawlspace conditions across this range are quite diverse. The Willowbrook and Walnut Grove areas have significant numbers of homes built in the late 1980s and 1990s on relatively flat ground with clay subsoils, while the agricultural fringe areas are more variable, with some properties on older farmland with organic soils that are slow to drain.
Surrey receives roughly 1,500 millimetres of precipitation annually, with the bulk of it arriving between October and March. For homes with crawlspaces, especially those in lower-lying areas of Newton, Bridgeview, or along the Serpentine and Nicomekl river floodplains, that volume of rainfall can overwhelm perimeter drainage and allow water to accumulate beneath the floor. A properly sized and installed sump pump is the most reliable mechanical defense against crawlspace flooding.
The choice of pump matters significantly. Sump pumps are rated by horsepower and gallons-per-hour capacity, and the right specification depends on the size of the drainage catchment area and how quickly water accumulates during peak events. Undersized pumps run continuously during heavy rain events, wear out faster, and may not keep pace with inflow. We size pumps to handle well above the expected worst-case scenario for a given home's drainage conditions.
Why Choose Us in Langley?
- Experience with Langley's specific soil and drainage conditions
- Custom-designed systems — not one-size-fits-all packages
- Fully licensed, insured, and WCB-covered technicians
- Written report with photos after every inspection
- Workmanship guarantee on all completed work
Request Service in Langley
About Langley — What We See Here
The Langley City core has housing stock dating back to the early 1960s, with some of the most significant moisture and structural issues we see in the region. Crawlspaces in homes of this era were built with wood posts sitting directly on concrete pads — sometimes directly on soil — and fibreglass batt insulation that was marginal even when installed. After six decades of Pacific Northwest rainfall cycling through these crawlspaces, the moisture damage in original structural wood can be substantial. We often find multiple post replacements needed alongside encapsulation when working in the city core.
Fort Langley and Murrayville present heritage preservation considerations that add complexity to crawlspace work. Older homes in these communities sometimes have original construction methods and materials that require care to work around without damaging historically significant elements. We approach these jobs with that context in mind, matching repair materials to the era of the structure where possible and being conservative with interventions that could affect the character of the building.