Common callouts
Suburb intel
If you're in Pennington and something's not flowing right, it's probably not new. Homes around here are solid but they're ageing, and April weather doesn't help. A blocked drain or burst pipe doesn't usually announce itself politely — you'll notice water pooling, slow drainage, or a smell. The council's infrastructure work around South Road and Torrens Road is ongoing, so if you're in those zones and your water pressure drops suddenly or your sewer's backing up, it might be worth checking whether your connection's been affected. We've seen enough older Charles Sturt properties to know what usually goes wrong and when.
About this area
Pennington's still early days for us, but the housing stock tells you everything you need to know. You're looking at a mix of older post-war and 70s-built stuff across Western Adelaide, and that means copper and galvanised plumbing that's been in the ground for 40-50 years. The City of Charles Sturt has had a wet April — we're talking 40mm in a single day early in the month — and that tends to flush out the real problems. Blocked drains that've been quietly filling up, old earthenware sewer pipes that crack under pressure, rusted galvo that finally gives way. Right now the council's busy with boundary realignments around South Road and Torrens Road after the State infrastructure works, which means underground services are being relocated and reconnected. If you're near those corridors, there's a decent chance your water or sewer connection gets affected or needs checking over.
Emergency Tradie dispatches CBS SA verified plumbers to Pennington around the clock. One call connects you to the closest available professional — no hold music, no callback queues.
Pennington's built on ageing housing stock — mostly 70s-80s suburban homes — with galvanised and copper plumbing that's hitting the end of its lifespan. The council's actively relocating underground services on major roads, which creates both disruptions and follow-on work. Add in April's heavy rainfall (40mm+ falls are pushing old earthenware sewers and blocked drains to failure point), and plumbing is the trade that gets called hardest in this area. You're not looking at fancy extension work or new builds; you're looking at aging infrastructure under stress.