Common callouts
Suburb intel
Everard Park's got good bones in the homes but the plumbing underneath is running on borrowed time. If you're sitting on a 1940s or 50s brick place, get someone to do a quick camera scope of your sewer line before it becomes an emergency — it'll cost $200-300 now and save you thousands later. The clay soil here doesn't help drainage either, so if you've noticed stormwater sitting around the back garden after rain, that's not just weather — that's your ground telling you the system needs attention. If council's been digging anywhere near your property boundary, keep an eye on your water pressure and listen for dripping sounds under the slab over the next few weeks. Older galvanised pipes can crack under stress and take days to show up as a wet patch. And hot water units — if yours is original to the house, it's on borrowed time. Ring early, not when you've got no hot water in the middle of winter.
About this area
Everard Park is a tight little suburb wedged between Greenhill Road and the Anzac Highway corridor — and right now the City of Unley is looking hard at what's under and around those main roads. Most homes here are solid inter-war and post-war brick, which means the drainage and supply lines running under them are getting on in age. When council starts digging up the boundaries of a suburb like this, older pipes nearby can cop stress they haven't felt in decades.
The housing stock here tells the real story. You've got homes built in the 1940s and 50s with clay pipe and terracotta sewer systems that have never been replaced — just quietly doing their job for 75+ years. Big established trees are common in Everard Park back gardens, and tree roots have had decades to find every joint in those old lines. Galvanised supply pipes under slabs are corroding from the inside out, and nobody's touched them since they were laid. Hot water units from that era are finally giving up the ghost. It's not a crisis suburb — it's a slow-burn one where infrastructure is just hitting that wall.
If you're ringing about a blocked drain or a slow stormwater backup, you need to know that Everard Park's topography and soil conditions mean water doesn't always flow the way you'd expect. The older flat allotments near the reserve can pool water for days after heavy rain because the clay soil's got no fall and the stormwater lines junction with street drainage gets overwhelmed. It's not the pipes' fault — it's the ground they're sitting in. And if you've got a burst under the slab or a hot water unit on the way out, don't wait. These jobs get worse fast when the housing stock is this old and the pipes have been sweating it out for 80 years.
We've seen a decent wet spell in early April — 40mm on the 8th and another 24mm the next day — which is exactly when these older systems show their age. Nothing's come through as a major crisis call yet from Everard Park, but that's early days for us in the suburb. The housing tells you what to expect.
Everard Park's housing stock is almost entirely inter-war and post-war brick — clay pipe sewers from the 1940s-50s, galvanised supply lines under slabs, and terracotta drainage running under established gardens full of tree roots. These pipes are hitting 75+ years old and failing fast. Add the City of Unley's infrastructure work around the main roads and you've got a suburb where plumbing calls are inevitable, not optional.