Why Homes Along Buford Highway Have More Drain Problems Than Anywhere Else

Why Homes Along Buford Highway Have More Drain Problems Than Anywhere Else

Talk to any plumber who works the Norcross, GA corridor and the same pattern comes up. Homes that sit close to Buford Highway see more clogged drains, more sewer backups, and more repeat blockages than other parts of town. This is not a homeowner myth. It is a mix of aging private laterals, soil movement in Gwinnett County’s red clay, traffic-driven settlement near the corridor, and older materials such as clay and cast iron that are at or past their service life. Add dense tree canopies and restaurant-heavy commercial stretches that stress the shared sewer infrastructure, and the result is frequent calls for emergency plumbing, hydro jetting, and main sewer line repair from 30071, 30093, and the 30092 border.

What makes the Buford Highway corridor different

Norcross has two distinct eras of housing stock along and just off Buford Highway. In Historic Norcross near Norcross City Hall and Thrasher Park, many houses went in between the 1950s and 1970s. Builders laid clay tile and cast iron drains under slab foundations and out to the alley or rear utility easements. Further northwest toward the Global Forum area and down toward Gwinnett Village near Jimmy Carter Boulevard, later subdivisions blended older tie-ins with newer PVC, but with long laterals that cross settled fill, driveway aprons, and tree lines. Those laterals often run parallel to high-traffic routes before tying into city mains. The route length, combined with older joints, makes them vulnerable to root intrusion and partial collapses that do not show up until the first heavy rain of spring.

Gwinnett County’s red clay expands in wet months and shrinks in dry spells. That seasonal movement places stress at every hub and spigot joint in clay tile. When a joint opens even a hair, fine roots enter and thicken. A homeowner then sees a slow drain that clears for a week after a quick snake, only to return as soon as branches downstream trap lint and paper. Along Buford Highway, roadwork and recurring utility trenching over decades have created layers of fill soils with uneven compaction. Private sewer lines that cross those zones settle at different rates. Technicians commonly see bellies in the pipe that hold water between cleanout access and the main sewer line. Those bellies collect grease and debris. Every rainstorm adds silt and groundwater infiltration through crack points, which further slows the flow.

Housing age and pipe materials near Buford Highway

Older sections of Norcross, especially blocks that feed Historic Norcross and the Buford Highway corridor, still rely on clay pipe and cast iron drains that predate Schedule 40 PVC. Clay pipe is brittle and is joined by mortared hubs. Cast iron from that era corrodes from the inside out. As corrosion layers flake, the bore becomes ragged and snags wipes and paper. PVC performs better, but undersized transitions and poorly glued couplings from early remodels near the 1980s and 1990s can pull apart when the ground shifts. It is routine to find a PVC-to-cast iron transition shield that has slipped, creating an offset the size of a pencil at the invert. That small offset is enough to catch a wad of paper and start a chain reaction of blockages.

Another local factor is Orangeburg pipe in scattered segments from homes built or remodeled before 1970. Orangeburg is a wood-fiber bitumen pipe that deforms into an oval with age. Once identified on a sewer camera inspection, it is not a candidate for restoration by hydro jetting alone. The wall softens under pressure. Lining or replacement is the responsible answer when Orangeburg shows up in the corridor. Along Buford Highway, Orangeburg tends to appear where private laterals cross older right-of-way cuts or where a homeowner tied into an existing clay run with whatever material the contractor had on hand decades ago. Those patch sections are now the weak links.

The environmental load that most residents do not see

Norcross maintains sanitary sewer mains that run behind lots in several stretches close to Buford Highway, including segments behind small commercial parcels that house restaurants and markets. During peak hours, grease-laden wastewater surges down these mains. City grease trap enforcement has improved, but even compliant systems pass trace fats and oils. Those residues drift into private laterals at tie-in points and adhere to rough pipe walls. Homes near Gwinnett Village and the Global Forum area feel this effect the most because the mix of residential and food service properties is dense. The effect is not dramatic at first. It presents as slow drains and gurgling sounds every few weeks. Over time, the coating thickens. When a cast iron interior is already rough, the restriction becomes significant, and a full main line backup is one long shower or one laundry day away.

A shareable fact from local fieldwork: homes within a block or two of Buford Highway between Jimmy Carter Boulevard and Global Forum often have their main cleanout buried under a widened driveway or a later patio pour. That single detail adds crucial minutes to an emergency response because the technician must locate and expose the cleanout before hydro jetting or a camera run can start. This was less common in streets further from the corridor where right-of-way changes and driveway widenings were not as frequent. Exposing the cleanout and bringing it to grade with a proper riser dramatically cuts the time to clear a backup on return visits.

Why rain seems to trigger sewer backups here

Residents near Thrasher Park, Gwinnett Village, and the Buford Highway corridor report sewer backups more often after heavy rain. The cause is not just volume in the city mains. The common cause is infiltration and inflow at the private lateral. A hairline crack in a clay hub allows groundwater to enter, and a shallow belly holds that water. During a storm, the private line flows partly full even when nobody is using a fixture. The line loses its air space, which prevents proper venting. A toilet then flushes into a pipe with no oxygen cushion, and the waste meets a standing pool at the belly. The flow stalls, backs up into the tub, and the homeowner smells sewage. Snaking may open a small path, but until a technician eliminates the belly or seals the crack, the cycle repeats with the next storm.

Nearby mature hardwoods make the problem worse. The Historic Norcross canopy is beautiful, but root intrusion is relentless where clay and cast iron meet at older joints. Along Buford Highway and Peachtree Industrial Boulevard corridors, roots also find the disturbed soil in past utility trenches easy to colonize. Root intrusion often appears first as gurgling drains and a slow kitchen sink. If ignored, it progresses to sewage in the yard at the property line cleanout when the line finally chokes off.

Street slope, lateral length, and why “flat” pipes happen near busy roads

Another local dynamic is geometry. On streets where the city main runs behind the lots, many private laterals must run long distances across backyards and under fences before meeting the main. Every extra foot reduces the margin for error in slope. Builders of the era routinely set laterals at minimal fall to protect foundations and avoid deep trenching. Traffic vibration near Buford Highway over decades, plus small soil shifts, can relax that tight slope into negative segments. A camera inspection often reveals water standing in a four to ten foot reach just downstream of a turn, with fine sediment tracing where inflow enters. That negative slope segment becomes the clog magnet. Clearing helps, but without correcting slope through spot repair, pipe bursting, or trenchless pipe lining, the pattern recurs.

Technicians in Norcross also see flat spots under driveway aprons that tie into Buford Highway. Driveway replacements and apron thickening add load. Without proper backfill compaction over the lateral, the pipe deflects slightly. Cast iron tolerates some point load but corrodes faster at stress points. Clay fractures. PVC bows. Any of these outcomes produce a trap-like dip that behaves like a hidden P-trap in the yard, catching debris every time volumes spike.

Common failure signatures along the Buford Highway corridor

Patterns repeat across blocks in 30071, 30093, and on the 30092 border near Peachtree Corners. The symptoms cluster in a few predictable groups. Recognizing them helps set expectations for diagnosis and repair.

    Recurring main line stoppages with sewage smell in floor drains after rainfall. Often tied to clay hub cracks and bellies in long laterals to rear easements. Gurgling toilets and slow tubs in homes near high-traffic sections. Usually linked to negative slope segments or partially collapsed cast iron under driveway aprons. Kitchen sink backups that return within weeks. Frequent where grease carryover from nearby commercial mains coats rough cast iron interiors just past the P-trap and cleanout access. Surface seep or sewage in yard near property line. Common at failed transition couplings from PVC to cast iron or clay at older tap points. Wet basement or damp slab edges in Historic Norcross. Often driven by under-slab leaks in corroded cast iron or failed P-trap arms in laundry or bath groups.

Why quick snaking fails more here than in other parts of Norcross

Snaking clears soft blockages. It does not correct offset joints, eliminate a belly, remove a root mass at a crack, or smooth a corroded cast iron wall. The corridor’s problems are structural as often as they are soft obstructions. That is why Benjamin Franklin Plumbing leans on sewer camera inspection and hydro jetting as the baseline in this area before advising on trenchless pipe lining or excavation. A technician must confirm the pipe material, depth, and condition to choose the right path. Without that confirmation, repeat clog calls become a routine expense for the homeowner.

In many Buford Highway cases, the most efficient long-term solution is a cleanout installation near the home with a proper two-way riser. This allows upstream and downstream access for future maintenance without cutting a toilet or running a cable from a roof vent. In older Norcross blocks where the https://benjamin-franklin.s3.us.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud/emergency-plumbing/why-historic-norcross-homes-have-the-worst-pipe-problems-in-gwinnett-county.html home’s only access is a buried single-direction cleanout at the curb, adding a new cleanout near the foundation transforms maintenance. It also creates a safe entry point for hydro jetting, which is vital when clay or cast iron segments need thorough wall cleaning before assessment.

How code updates in 2026 change emergency work decisions

Norcross operates under the 2026 Georgia State Amendments to the International Plumbing Code. The update includes the Mandatory High-Efficiency Fixture Requirement in Section 301.1.1. If a toilet or urinal fails during an emergency and must be replaced, the replacement must be a WaterSense model rated at 1.28 gallons per flush for toilets and 0.5 for urinals. That requirement applies even for emergency swaps. For homeowners along Buford Highway in 30071 and nearby 30093, this comes up often when backups overrun a bathroom and ruin a wax ring or damage a base. The new fixture must meet the standard to pass inspection.

Any emergency work that involves digging on a water main or sewer lateral in Norcross requires a permit. Gwinnett County now uses the ZIP Portal for digital submissions. If a line fails under a driveway or a yard and excavation cannot wait, the law allows rapid stabilization while the team files for an after-the-fact permit. Benjamin Franklin Plumbing handles that paperwork to keep projects compliant and moving. This matters along Buford Highway where many laterals cross right-of-way edges and require careful coordination with county inspectors.

Field approach that works in the corridor

Every drain call along Buford Highway starts with questions about symptom timing, rain correlation, and fixture sequence. Then a technician sets cleanout access. If no access exists, the team creates one. The next step is a sewer camera inspection to document line material transitions, depth, offsets, and any standing water. Hydro jetting is used to remove roots, grease, and scale. In cast iron, a descaling nozzle strips internal corrosion that traps debris. In clay, a root-cutting head opens joints. The camera then confirms the structure of the line.

Where trenchless pipe lining fits, it often solves the problem without a full yard dig. CIPP lining can bridge small offsets and seal root-prone joints. It performs well in clay segments under mature trees. In cast iron under slabs, lining prevents future leaks that show up as wet slab edges or low water pressure complaints from slab leaks damaging supply lines nearby. If a collapse exists or a belly is too deep, excavation or pipe bursting may be the better fix. Along Buford Highway, careful planning protects driveway aprons and landscaping, which are often additions built after the original home. Teams mark utilities, verify depth, and choose the least disruptive route.

Why backups happen more often near specific landmarks

Homes within a mile of Norcross City Hall, Thrasher Park, and the Buford Highway corridor share the same older infrastructure and soil conditions. Several blocks use rear easement sewer mains that create long private laterals. Near Gwinnett Village and the Global Forum, mixed commercial and residential ties into the same trunk lines. That exposure increases grease film build-up in nearby laterals. On the Peachtree Industrial Boulevard side, the ground has many utility crossings from decades of telecom and power upgrades. Private laterals in those zones have more joints and more chances for leaks. The Technology Park and Peachtree Corners border area in 30092 also has many slab-on-grade homes with original cast iron drains. Those drains are now reaching an age where interior roughness and pinholes are common, leading to slow drains and occasional sewage odors through floor drains even when no visible backup occurs.

Water pressure, fixtures, and what drain issues hide

A slow drain near Buford Highway can hide parallel issues on the supply side. Corroded galvanized steel or cast iron waste stacks can share chases with old copper supply lines. If a waste line leaks under the slab, water often migrates to the foundation edge and presents as a wet basement or a foundation leak. In Historic Norcross, that can threaten the integrity of older, shallow footings. Leak detection becomes essential. Electronic acoustic detection pinpoints slab leaks. A camera confirms waste line conditions. Solving the drain problem alone will not protect a home if under-slab water erodes subgrade soils around the supply line or damages the backflow preventer in homes with irrigation.

Appliances and drain behavior in older Norcross homes

Garbage disposals discharge directly into kitchen drains. In homes near Buford Highway with rough cast iron or partial grease coating, disposals accelerate clog formation. Food particles snag immediately on roughness. A kitchen that used to run clear for months will show a slow drain in days. Tankless water heaters from brands like Rinnai and Navien supply hot water reliably, but poor venting of drain lines or a P-trap without adequate slope can cause intermittent odors that homeowners mistake for water heater issues. Sump pumps and sewage ejector pumps in partial basements near the corridor also face high workloads where groundwater rises after storms. A failing check valve or undersized basin allows short-cycling, which stirs settled fines and sends them into house drains, triggering clogs that seem unrelated at first.

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For water heating, many Norcross homeowners are upgrading to A.O. Smith or Bradford White high-efficiency units or hybrid heat pump water heaters. This helps with utility rebates available in 2026. It does not change the drain dynamics, but a proper condensate drain and a code-compliant indirect connection are vital to avoid cross-connection risks. Technicians also check that thermal expansion tanks are correctly pressurized to prevent pressure spikes that could stress older shut-off valves and supply lines in these homes.

Backflow and flood risk in the corridor

Several low-lying stretches near the Buford Highway corridor are vulnerable to surface water during intense storms. While municipal sewers are separate from storm drains, pressure waves in the mains can reflect into private lines when infiltration is high. Where floor drains exist in basements or low baths, a backflow preventer can save a cleanup. Older homes in Historic Norcross often do not have one. Benjamin Franklin Plumbing installs code-compliant backwater valves that protect basements and first-floor baths during storm surges. In homes with a sump pump or a sewage ejector pump, reliable check valves and periodic testing prevent reflux that can carry solids back into house drains after the pump shuts off.

What a camera usually finds along Buford Highway

In practice, camera inspections in this corridor reveal three frequent issues. First, a series of fine root filaments at each clay joint, often starting ten to twenty feet from the home where the pipe leaves the foundation plantings. Second, standing water in a reach that is otherwise clear, usually five to fifteen feet long. Third, a transition mismatch from PVC to clay or cast iron at the tap point, with a visible lip that snags paper. These findings explain why a simple auger fails. They also explain why hydro jetting has higher success rates. A jet washes scale off cast iron and shaves root hairs close to joints. If a belly remains, the camera shows it, and the team can plot a repair to restore proper slope.

Permits, inspections, and doing work the right way

Homeowners along Buford Highway cannot afford work stoppages during a sewer backup. That is where proper permitting through the Gwinnett County ZIP Portal matters. For emergency excavation on a water main or sewer line repair Norcross a sewer lateral, the team files digitally while stabilizing the situation. This is the fastest route that stays within the law. Camera documentation attached to the permit streamlines county review. In the 30071 Historic Norcross area, non-invasive methods are preferred to protect older structures and landscaping. Where slab cutting is required, precise layout protects original framing and reduces the footprint of the repair. When a restroom fixture fails and must be replaced during emergency work, the 2026 high-efficiency requirement applies, and technicians supply WaterSense-listed options that meet Section 301.1.1. That avoids failed inspections and second trips.

Local examples along the corridor

Near Thrasher Park in 30071, technicians often see original cast iron under slab with pinhole leaks and heavy scaling. The first sign is a gurgling tub and sewage smell after rain. A camera confirms a belly and root intrusion at the yard. Hydro jetting clears the roots, and a spot repair corrects the slope near the patio where settlement occurred after a past addition. The home gains a new cleanout access near the foundation and a lined segment under a prized oak without disturbing the tree roots.

Closer to Gwinnett Village off Jimmy Carter Boulevard in 30093, mixed residential and commercial mains lead to heavy grease film in private laterals. Hydro jetting with a rotating grease head followed by descaling restores the bore. The technician recommends a maintenance jet and camera once per year. The homeowner also receives advice to avoid disposal of fats to slow the return of film. At the tap, a transition coupling is replaced to remove a lip that caught paper. The result is reliable flow at normal fixture usage volumes.

Along the Peachtree Corners border in 30092 near Jones Bridge Park access routes, longer laterals and yard trees of significant diameter mean frequent root masses at 25 to 40 feet from the home. A camera-guided root cut followed by a short CIPP liner across the worst joints prevents repeat intrusion. That solution avoids deep trenching near decorative retaining walls and irrigation lines.

What homeowners can watch for in this area

There are a few early signs that a Buford Highway area home is heading toward a main line backup. Watch for toilets that bubble when the washing machine drains. Listen for gurgling in a tub after the kitchen sink is used. Note any recurring sewage smell near a floor drain during heavy rain. Check for damp soil or a soft spot near the property line, which could indicate a leak at the transition. When these signs appear together, the odds are high that the private lateral has structural issues beyond a simple clog. A timely camera inspection prevents a midnight emergency plumbing call with sewage on the floor.

Materials and component choices that last in Norcross soils

For replacements in Norcross, Schedule 40 PVC remains the standard for drains. Proper bedding and compaction are critical in the red clay to resist settlement. Shielded couplings provide a stable transition to any remaining cast iron or clay segments. Where supply lines need upgrades, PEX performs well under slabs when routed in sleeves, and CPVC remains a valid choice in many utility chases. Main cleanout risers should be brought to grade with secure covers. Backflow preventers must meet local code. Garbage disposals should discharge through a properly vented P-trap and tie into a smooth wall section to reduce clog risk.

For pump systems, Zoeller and Liberty Pumps are common choices that handle the intermittent surges typical of Norcross basements and crawl spaces during storm events. Correct sizing and a reliable check valve prevent reflux into house drains. For water heating, Rinnai and Navien tankless units or high-efficiency Bradford White and A.O. Smith tanks deliver reliable hot water in homes where space is tight and venting is limited. Regardless of brand, the install must respect the 2026 Georgia code for efficiency and safety. That includes proper expansion control, relief valve discharge routing, and condensate management.

Why Buford Highway homes need stronger maintenance intervals

Given the corridor’s unique mix of soil movement, older materials, and environmental load, an annual or semi-annual drain maintenance schedule prevents emergencies. A light hydro jetting pass and a quick camera look at known trouble spots keeps lines clear and catches shifts before they become major repairs. For homes that sit within a block of the heaviest traffic or share mains near restaurant clusters, a biannual schedule is not excessive. It is cheaper than one middle-of-the-night cleanup and often extends the life of older segments until a planned rehab can be scheduled.

Serving every Norcross neighborhood along the corridor

Benjamin Franklin Plumbing works every street along Buford Highway and beyond. Historic Norcross homes near Town Center and Thrasher Park see technicians with experience in cast iron under-slab repairs and careful trenchless options to protect porches and mature roots. The Buford Highway Corridor itself, from Norcross City Hall past the Global Forum and into the Gwinnett Village area near Jimmy Carter Boulevard, gets rapid response for main line backups, hydro jetting, and sewer camera inspection. The Peachtree Corners and Technology Park side in 30092 sees teams handle long-lateral diagnostics and spot repairs that correct negative slope without tearing up entire yards. Crews also support nearby Duluth by Gwinnett Place Mall, Lilburn, Lawrenceville, Tucker, Doraville, and Chamblee when a Norcross resident calls about a stubborn drain that other attempts failed to fix.

Coverage includes zip codes 30071, 30093, 30092, 30003, and 30010. That reach matters because many backups along Buford Highway are not isolated plumbing events. They are neighborhood patterns. A team that works these streets every day brings that context to the job. The right equipment, including sewer camera inspection gear, jetters for hydro jetting, and trenchless pipe lining systems, rides on fully stocked service vehicles. That lets the technician clear, locate, and repair without multiple trips.

How Benjamin Franklin Plumbing handles corridor emergencies

For a sewer backup near Buford Highway, the dispatcher prioritizes the call because sewage exposure escalates quickly. A licensed Emergency Plumber arrives with same-day plumbing service capability. The first step is safety and containment. The next is access at the cleanout and a quick assessment of whether the blockage is local or in the main sewer line. Hydro jetting clears roots and grease. A sewer camera inspection documents the cause. If the line shows a hole, offset, or collapse, the technician discusses trenchless pipe lining, pipe burst repair, or excavation with the homeowner, including route, depth, and likely restoration steps.

For a burst pipe under a slab, especially in older homes near the corridor, electronic leak detection narrows the target. Where a water main leak in the yard is suspected, the crew locates the line and confirms whether a full water line repair or a partial replacement makes sense. Low water pressure complaints get measured at hose bibs and fixtures to rule out pressure regulator failures. Wet basement signs in Historic Norcross trigger both drain and sump pump service checks, plus evaluation of any sewage ejector pump present for basements that sit below the main. If an appliance contributes, such as a garbage disposal or a whole-house water filtration backwash line improperly tied into a drain, the connection is corrected to meet code and reduce clog risk.

Local, technical, and shareable: a Norcross drain insight

Here is a specific, grounded detail that surprises many homeowners. Along the Buford Highway corridor in Norcross, laterals that cross driveway aprons poured between the late 1980s and early 2000s are far more likely to develop a hidden belly within ten feet of the sidewalk. The reason is simple. Many of those aprons were thickened during streetscape programs and utility upgrades. If the lateral bedding was not re-compacted to spec after the work, the added apron weight created a slight sag in the pipe over time. A camera run that shows standing water just beyond the apron footprint is the tell. Correcting that single segment removes the chronic clog point. This insight is local to the corridor’s history of right-of-way changes and is one of the first things a Norcross-focused technician checks.

Serving every corner of Norcross’s map and code

Work along Buford Highway touches city, county, and state rules. Benjamin Franklin Plumbing navigates the Gwinnett County ZIP Portal for permits on emergency work. The team installs WaterSense-listed fixtures that meet the 2026 Georgia code. For high-efficiency upgrades like hybrid heat pump water heaters, technicians help homeowners understand current rebates and local utility credits in 2026. That guidance does not slow an emergency. It happens in parallel, so the home gets restored service fast and the documentation follows. The approach matters in 30071’s Historic Norcross district, where non-invasive methods protect architecture, and in busy 30093 blocks by Gwinnett Village, where access windows can be tight.

Why homeowners along Buford Highway choose specialists who know the corridor

The difference between a one-time fix and a cycle of repeat clogs is diagnosis. In this corridor, strong local knowledge saves time and money. Knowing where mains run behind lots, where apron sags tend to form, and which blocks have original clay or cast iron helps the technician focus the camera run and choose tools. Recognizing that a slow drain during storms likely signals infiltration and inflow rather than a simple blockage prevents wasted visits and pushes the repair toward sealing cracks or correcting slope. Understanding that a WaterSense 1.28 gpf replacement is now required in 2026 keeps emergency fixture swaps on the right side of the code in Norcross. That combination of plumbing skill, local mapping, and code fluency is what reduces emergencies along Buford Highway.

Why homes along Buford Highway experience more drain problems than anywhere else

It comes down to five forces that stack together in this unique part of Norcross: older clay and cast iron at the end of service life; long, flat laterals to rear easements with little room for slope errors; soil expansion and contraction in red clay that opens joints and creates bellies; traffic and construction history that introduced settlement under driveway aprons and right-of-way edges; and higher environmental load from nearby restaurant and commercial mains that film private laterals with grease faster than in purely residential blocks. None of these forces alone would put this corridor at the top of the drain problem list. Together they do. That is why technicians who serve this area keep sewer camera inspection equipment and hydro jetting units ready on every truck and why trenchless pipe lining is a frequent recommendation for durable relief.

Serving every Norcross neighborhood in 30071, 30092, 30093, 30003, and 30010

Coverage includes Historic Norcross near Town Square and Thrasher Park, the Buford Highway Corridor from Norcross City Hall past Global Forum, Technology Park and Peachtree Corners edges in 30092, and the Gwinnett Village and Jimmy Carter Boulevard area in 30093. Teams are also familiar with nearby Duluth by Gwinnett Place Mall, Lilburn, Tucker, Doraville, Chamblee, and Lawrenceville, where similar soil and infrastructure patterns play out. Whether the call is for Drain Cleaning, Sewer Line Repair, Hydro Jetting, Water Line Repair, Leak Detection, Sump Pump Service, Water Heater Repair, or a Same-Day Plumbing Service visit to stop a Burst Pipe, the approach is consistent. Diagnose with a camera, clear with the right tool, and repair with materials and methods that stand up to Norcross conditions.

Why Norcross homeowners call Benjamin Franklin Plumbing first

Benjamin Franklin Plumbing dispatches licensed, background-checked technicians across Norcross around the clock. The company holds Georgia state licensing and operates in compliance with Gwinnett County permitting. Trucks arrive stocked to complete most repairs in a single visit. Upfront flat-rate pricing is provided before work begins. Appointments are available the same day for emergency plumbing along Buford Highway, Historic Norcross, Technology Park, and the Peachtree Corners border. The on-time promise applies, and if the technician is late, the diagnostic fee is waived. Service includes 24/7 Emergency Service, Same-Day Appointments, Fully Stocked Service Vehicles, and a 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Call the Norcross team any time to request an Emergency Plumber, schedule a sewer camera inspection, or book hydro jetting and drain cleaning that address the real causes behind the corridor’s persistent backups.

Benjamin Franklin Plumbing in North Atlanta
3230 Peachtree Corners Cir Suite C,
Norcross, GA 30092
United States

Phone: +1 404-919-7459