Mile End: Emergency Plumber Available 24/7
City of West Torrens · Council intelligence · Updated 2026-04-28
Electrical
“Council resolved to grant the Department for Energy and Mining a 20-year peppercorn lease over part of Richmond Oval at 11-13 Kingston Avenue, Richmond, for installation and operation of a community battery.”
City of West Torrens Council Meeting, 21 April 2026, Item 16.1
Drainage
“Cr Kym McKay reported meeting with residents to inspect footpaths, side-entry pits and stormwater flow issues, indicating ongoing stormwater/drainage concerns at residential properties.”
Elected Members Reports, City of West Torrens Council Meeting, 21 April 2026
Stormwater
“Council received the Brown Hill Keswick Creek Stormwater Project Newsletter Update for March 2026, indicating ongoing major regional stormwater infrastructure works affecting West Torrens.”
Correspondence, City of West Torrens Council Meeting, 21 April 2026, Item 19.1
The City of West Torrens is an established inner-western Adelaide council covering suburbs including Hilton, Richmond, Lockleys, Plympton, Mile End, Torrensville, Thebarton, Cowandilla and Novar Gardens. The area is a mix of post-war and mid-20th century detached housing with significant heritage/historic character zones (e.g. Cowandilla), alongside newer infill and medium-density development. The Greater Adelaide Regional Plan identifies West Torrens growth areas plus general infill, signalling continued densification. The combination of older housing stock and active infill development means a wide range of housing ages — from pre-war character homes through mid-century brick and tile to recent townhouses and apartments. City of West Torrens is a densely populated inner-western metropolitan Adelaide council adjacent to Adelaide Airport, with 14 elected members across multiple wards including Airport Ward. The council is actively progressing several infrastructure-relevant initiatives: a community battery installation at Richmond Oval, ongoing Brown Hill–Keswick Creek stormwater catchment works, a road-purpose land acquisition at Ashley Street/Hardys Road, redevelopments at Cowandilla Reserve and Lockleys Oval, and preparation of a Local Area Plan for housing growth and supporting infrastructure. The mix of aging stormwater assets (residents reporting side-entry pit and stormwater flow issues), heritage housing, and growth-driven infill creates sustained demand for emergency plumbing, drainage, electrical and roofing trades — particularly during storm events and around active construction zones.
Mile End plumbing emergencies usually boil down to age and weather. The housing stock here — mostly post-war, some older character properties — means pipes that weren't designed for heavy spring and autumn downpours. Council's been actively working on stormwater infrastructure, which signals the drainage side has been problematic. If you're in Mile End and your drains are backing up or you've got a burst, it's not a fluke — it's the area. We run 24/7 across western Adelaide, and Mile End's on our radar for the right reasons.
- Blocked side-entry pits during heavy rain (council reported ongoing issues)
- Stormwater overflow and drainage flow problems in low-lying areas
- Burst pipes in post-war brick veneer homes during wet weather
- Hot water system failures in aging residential stock
- Blocked sewer lines in homes with original copper or clay pipework
- Water leaks from corroded or damaged downpipes and overflow systems
- Drainage issues affecting properties near Brown Hill–Keswick Creek catchment zone
- Poly pipe failures in mid-century homes (common in this era)