
Bringing a Sagging Condo Back to Life
The middle of the unit showed clear deflection, soft spots, and uneven floor lines — classic signs of inadequate support below, as much as 3 inches.
The Problem
We were called to a condo with a serious structural concern: the center of the floor had noticeably sagged. Homeowners often first notice this as soft spots, sloping floors, or doors that suddenly don’t close right. In this case, the deflection had progressed far enough that corrective structural work was the only responsible fix.
Our Approach
After a full evaluation, we determined the floor system needed supplemental support in the crawl space. The plan was straightforward but labor-intensive: install new beams and adjustable support jacks to carefully lift and stabilize the center of the home.
Working in a tight crawl space is never glamorous. Limited clearance, uneven soil, and the need for precise measurements make this type of job one where experience really matters.
The Structural Fix
Our crew installed 13 heavy-duty adjustable jacks along newly added support beams beneath the affected area. The lifting process was done gradually and methodically — never all at once — to avoid cracking finishes or stressing the structure.
Step by step, we:
Reinforced the beam layout
Installed properly spaced footings
Set and calibrated 13 adjustable jacks
Slowly raised the floor system back toward level
Locked everything into permanent support
By the end, the center of the condo was restored to proper elevation and, more importantly, properly supported for the long term.
The Result
The difference was immediate. Floors felt solid again, transitions leveled out, and the structure was back where it belonged. This wasn’t just a cosmetic improvement — it was a structural correction that protects the property’s value and livability.
Lessons for Homeowners
Floor sag rarely fixes itself. In fact, it almost always gets worse.
If you notice:
Sloping or dipping floors
Bouncy spots in the middle of the home
Cracks appearing above doorways
Doors sticking for no clear reason
…it’s time to have the structure evaluated.
Early intervention is almost always simpler and less expensive than waiting until the problem becomes severe.
Built Right Insight
Crawl space work isn’t pretty, but it’s where some of the most important structural repairs happen. The key is proper diagnosis, proper load paths, and patient lifting — not shortcuts.
If your home is showing signs of structural movement, it’s worth getting expert eyes on it before small deflection turns into major damage.



