Water Damage Restoration in Salt Lake City, UT
Salt Lake City is the most technically demanding water damage restoration market in our service area — not because events are more severe, but because the construction stock is older, more varied, and more likely to conceal moisture behind assemblies that resist visible inspection than anywhere else we work. A single block in the Avenues may contain a 1908 Victorian, a 1927 craftsman, a 1955 ranch, and a 2018 infill townhouse — each with different framing species, different wall finishes, different supply plumbing materials, and different moisture behavior under the same event type. The restoration company that applies the same protocol to all four will produce adequate results on the 2018 townhouse and incomplete results on the other three. We do not apply the same protocol to all four.
True Day Water Damage Restoration is a locally owned South Jordan company, based at 11268 S 2865 W — approximately twenty minutes from south Salt Lake City neighborhoods. We serve the Avenues, Capitol Hill, Sugar House, Sugarmont, Liberty Wells, East Bench, the 9th and 9th district, Federal Heights, and commercial and residential properties throughout Salt Lake City. Licensed Utah Contractor #960332-3505, IICRC Firm #927354-5258. Call us at (385) 247-9359.
Salt Lake City Water Damage — Complete Service by Construction Era
Pre-1940 Historic Construction — Avenues, Capitol Hill, 9th and 9th
Salt Lake City’s pre-1940 residential stock presents the most technically demanding water damage restoration scenarios in our service area — and the ones where the gap between correct and incorrect assessment is largest. Three-coat plaster wall assemblies resist moisture entry at the surface while concealing framing that has been wet for weeks. Douglas fir and Engelmann spruce framing hold moisture at different equilibrium curves than modern dimensional lumber — and require species-specific dry standards applied with calibrated penetrating meters at the framing level, not at the plaster surface. Galvanized steel supply plumbing fails through progressive internal bore narrowing and pinhole corrosion that produces no external sign and no surface-visible leak until the framing behind it has been at germination-level moisture content for enough time to support Cladosporium colonization of the adjacent lath substrate.
Masonry foundation walls — brick and concrete block — absorb and release moisture at rates that extend drying timelines 40% to 70% beyond what the same square footage would require in contemporary construction. In properties built before 1978, floor tile adhesive, pipe insulation, and textured ceiling materials may contain asbestos-containing materials that require identification and abatement assessment before any demolition begins. We document the presence and location of suspect materials for the homeowner and recommend licensed abatement assessment before we or any contractor proceeds with demolition in their location — we are not licensed abatement contractors, but we recognize the material types and do not open assemblies containing them without appropriate prior assessment. Learn more: Moisture Detection — Salt Lake City | Structural Drying — Salt Lake City
Mid-Century Construction — Sugar House, Sugarmont, Liberty Wells
Sugar House’s mid-century ranch and split-level construction introduces gypsum drywall and copper supply plumbing — moving the dominant failure mode from galvanized pinhole corrosion to compression fitting fracture from Salt Lake City’s mineral-content water supply. Pre-1978 mid-century construction may also contain asbestos-bearing materials in the same location types as the pre-1940 stock. Big Cottonwood Creek and Mill Creek — which descend from Wasatch Range canyons through Cottonwood Heights and Holladay adjacent to Sugar House — create natural flood risk for floodplain-adjacent properties during spring snowmelt and North American Monsoon events that can approach or exceed urban flood stage in high-snowpack years. Learn more: Emergency Water Damage — Salt Lake City | Water Extraction — Salt Lake City
Contemporary and High-Density Construction — Granary Row, Central Business District, 400 South
Granary Row’s converted industrial buildings, the high-density residential towers of the Central Business District, and the mixed-use developments along 400 South present commercial-scale water damage restoration scenarios. Fire suppression sprinkler activations in multi-floor occupied buildings require phased extraction and drying coordinated around occupant schedules and building management requirements. Rooftop HVAC condensate overflow during North American Monsoon humidity spikes — when mechanical systems designed for Salt Lake City’s typical dry conditions encounter sustained outdoor relative humidity at 60% to 70% — produces ceiling and wall assembly moisture events in high-density properties that can affect multiple occupied units simultaneously. Learn more: Commercial Water Damage Services
Services We Provide in Salt Lake City
- Emergency Water Damage — Salt Lake City
- Water Extraction — Salt Lake City
- Structural Drying — Salt Lake City
- Dehumidification — Salt Lake City
- Moisture Detection — Salt Lake City
- Mold Remediation
- Fire Damage Restoration
- Sewage Cleanup
- Commercial Water Damage
- Reconstruction & Repairs
- Insurance Claims Assistance
True Day Water Damage Restoration | 11268 S 2865 W, South Jordan, UT 84095 | (385) 247-9359 | Utah Contractor License: #960332-3505 | IICRC Firm ID: #927354-5258
