The Atascocita Job: Repipe Above, Sewer Below, One Project
The signature Atascocita plumbing call starts with a polybutylene supply line failure and ends with a root-clogged sewer lateral the homeowner didn’t know they had. Houses built between 1978 and 1995 across Atascocita Forest, Walden, Eagle Springs, and Pinehurst landed inside the polybutylene window, and those same lots sit under the heavy oak and pine canopy that defines this stretch of NE Harris County near Lake Houston. Roots chase moisture toward clay sewer joints, and by the time the supply side fails, the sewer side is usually whispering trouble too.
Bundling the work changes the math. When walls are already open for a PEX-A repipe, dropping a sewer camera down the cleanout adds an hour, not a separate service call. Spotting root intrusion or a bellied lateral before drywall closes back up means one mobilization instead of two, one set of patch-and-paint instead of cutting again next year. Atascocita homeowners on this combined path consistently spend less than neighbors who handle the supply and waste sides as separate projects months apart.
FM 1960 connects the New Caney shop to Atascocita without fighting I-69 traffic, so dispatch lands on time for scoped appointments. Financing options keep the combined-scope quote within reach, and pricing always shows the bundle savings line by line — repipe alone, sewer alone, both together — so the household sees exactly what the combined approach saves.