The pipe under a 1920s bungalow in East Central Ogden has been in the ground for a century. The student renting it has been there for a semester. That gap — between the age of the infrastructure and the knowledge of whoever is living with it — is what makes East Central Ogden drain calls different from most neighborhoods in the city. This is a Historic central Ogden neighborhood near Weber State University where original clay and cast iron lines have had generations of root exposure, soil settlement, and daily use, where high rental turnover means the person calling often has no idea what is in the ground or whether the line has ever been serviced, and where renovation projects can create mixed-material connections where new PVC meets century-old clay at a transition point that becomes the weakest link in the system. Sewer camera inspection, drain cleaning, hydro jetting, and sewer line repair and replacement are all available — but on homes this old, the camera is the most valuable tool in the truck because it shows what a century of use has done to the pipe before anyone recommends the next step.
Start with the symptom: one slow drain, multiple fixtures backing up, a sewage smell, or a clog that has been cleared before and came back. Then tell us who you are — homeowner, renter, landlord, or property manager — and what you know about the property: approximate age, whether the home has been renovated, and whether the line has been serviced or inspected before. If you are a renter, let us know whether the landlord has authorized service. If you are a landlord managing rentals near Weber State University, tell us the access and authorization path so the crew does not arrive to a locked property. Ogden is our highest-volume market, and East Central Ogden is one of the most frequent call areas — the crew knows these pipe conditions well.