Leaks, seepage, and musty crawl spaces — dried out at the source and kept that way.
A wet basement in Tulsa is rarely a mystery. Storm water soaks into clay that drains slowly, sits against the foundation, and pushes through the first gap it finds. The fix isn’t a coat of sealant over the damp spot — it’s a system that intercepts the water and moves it away before it gets in.
That system is built from interior and exterior waterproofing methods, sump pump installation, and drainage — combined to match how water is actually reaching your basement. The goal is a dry space that stays dry, protected from the mold, mildew, and structural damage that standing moisture causes. All work is backed by comprehensive warranties.
Cracks in the walls themselves? That may be structural — see foundation repair. Damp crawl space under a pier-and-beam home? It pairs with pier & beam repair.

Every job starts with a free, no-obligation inspection that traces where the water enters, where it comes from, and what it’s already damaged. Water that seeps at the floor-wall joint after a storm is a different fix than a wall weeping through a crack — and the inspection tells them apart before anything gets recommended.
Then the system goes in: drainage to intercept and carry the water, a sump pump to move it out and away, and interior or exterior waterproofing methods where the space needs them. Most repairs are completed within a few days, and you get a real number before any work starts.
Pier-and-beam homes don’t get wet basements — they get damp crawl spaces, which quietly soak the beams holding up the floor and push musty air into the house. Encapsulation, vapor barrier installation, and moisture control dry the space out and improve the indoor air quality of the whole home.
The problem: An east Tulsa home took water along one basement wall every spring storm season — enough to wet boxes on the floor and keep the space smelling musty all summer.
What was done: The inspection traced the water to storm runoff pooling against the foundation. Drainage was installed to intercept it, a sump pump went in at the low corner, and the wall got interior waterproofing where it had been seeping.
The result: The basement stayed dry through the next storm season, and the musty smell left with the moisture.
Green Country gets its rain in bursts — spring storm season stacks inches of water on clay that can’t absorb it fast enough, and that runoff heads straight for foundations. A local crew knows the pattern, knows which neighborhoods sit low, and builds drainage for the storms this metro actually gets, not a national average.
Green Country clay drains slowly, so storm water sits against the foundation and pushes through any gap it finds — wall cracks, the floor-wall joint, window wells. If the grading or gutters send roof water toward the house, the pressure gets worse with every storm.
Exterior methods stop water before it reaches the wall — drainage that moves water away from the foundation. Interior methods manage water that gets close anyway, collecting it and moving it out with drainage and a sump pump. Both approaches are used, and the inspection determines the right combination for your basement.
It sits at the low point of the basement or crawl space, collects the water that drainage channels bring to it, and pumps it out and away from the foundation before it can rise into the space.
It depends on where the water is coming from and what combination of drainage, sealing, and pumping the space needs — no honest number exists sight-unseen. The inspection is free and no-obligation, and you get a real answer before any work starts.
Yes. Water is behind most foundation trouble — it swells the clay that pushes walls inward, erodes support, and feeds mold, mildew, and structural damage inside the space. Fixing the water problem often is the foundation repair.
Same problem, different space. Crawl space encapsulation, vapor barrier installation, and moisture control keep ground moisture from soaking the wood structure — and improve the indoor air quality of the rooms above, since crawl space air moves up into the house.
The timeline depends on the extent of the work, but most repairs are completed within a few days. You’ll know what your job involves after the inspection.
Usually, yes — that smell is moisture feeding mold and mildew. Moisture control and drainage remove the water source, which is the only fix that lasts. Deodorizing without fixing the water just masks it for a week.
They’re the first line of defense. Roof water dumped next to the house soaks the clay right where it does the most damage. Drainage systems handle what the soil throws at the foundation, but keeping roof water away from the walls helps every other measure work better.
Yes — all repairs are backed by comprehensive warranties. Ask what the warranty covers for your specific job when you call.
Describe what you’re seeing and schedule a free, no-obligation inspection. No pressure, no hard sell.
(918) 555-0100