A grease-choked floor drain in a Historic 25th Street restaurant, a shared-main backup in a mixed-use building with apartments above a retail shop, and a slow drain in a century-old residential conversion are three different jobs — different equipment, different coordination, different urgency. Downtown Ogden is the city's Central business district, and the pipe beneath it tells the story of every era the district has been through: original clay and cast iron from the early 1900s in the oldest buildings, patched and mixed-material runs in renovated spaces, and commercial-diameter lines carrying decades of restaurant grease through some of the most heavily used drain infrastructure in Weber County. Drain cleaning, sewer camera inspection, hydro jetting, and sewer line repair and replacement are all available — the right one depends on the building, the buildup, and who needs to authorize the work.
Tell us the property type and the symptom. A restaurant manager with a floor drain backing up every few weeks needs hydro jetting on a maintenance schedule, not another cable run. A property manager dealing with a backup that is affecting both the ground-floor commercial tenant and the upstairs apartments needs the crew at the building main, not an individual unit. A residential homeowner in a converted downtown property needs the camera after the cleaning because the pipe material and condition are almost certainly unknowns. Share the address, who you are, and what is happening, and we will match the first visit to the right scope. Ogden is our highest-volume market — the crew is routing through downtown more frequently than any other part of the service area.