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It was a Sunday evening in November. Elena ran a bath, and the water took forever to drain. Then the kitchen sink gurgled. By midnight, a foul smell seeped from the plughole. The next morning, her neighbour from the flat upstairs knocked. “Your toilet waste is coming up through my shower tray,” he said quietly.
When Elena bought the ground-floor flat in a converted Victorian townhouse near Fulham Palace Road, the surveyor’s report mentioned only “limited drainage inspection.” She didn’t think much of it. The flat had high ceilings, a compact garden, and was a short walk to the Thames. Perfect. cctv drain survey hammersmith and fulham
Six weeks after moving in, the problems began. It was a Sunday evening in November
For the first ten metres, the pipe looked old but clear. Then the image wobbled. The camera entered a section of terracotta pipe, laid when Victoria was on the throne. And there it was: a . By midnight, a foul smell seeped from the plughole
The pipe had partially caved in, creating a shelf of broken clay and brick. Wastewater couldn’t flow to the main sewer under Fulham Palace Road. Worse, tree roots from a nearby London plane tree had invaded the joint, forming a dense, knotted mass Carla called “a root dam.”
Here’s a useful story based on real-world applications of CCTV drain surveys in the London boroughs of Hammersmith and Fulham.
The story doesn’t end there.