PlumbTech

PlumbingVerified

About

PlumbTech is a plumbing contractor in University Heights, San Diego — a sub-community within Normal Heights — operating from New Jersey Street under the ownership of Steven Rock since the LLC was incorporated in October 2020. The company holds BBB accreditation with an A+ rating and covers drain cleaning, leak detection, slab-leak repair, water-heater installation, gas-line service, repiping, and septic-system maintenance across the 92116 ZIP code. Slab-leak detection uses electronic amplification equipment to pinpoint supply-line failures beneath concrete foundations without exploratory demolition — a critical capability in University Heights, where post-war slab-on-grade construction is the dominant foundation type south of Meade Avenue. Bathroom and kitchen remodel plumbing includes fixture rough-in, supply-line relocation, and drain reconfiguration, and renovation contractors such as Abbas Upholstery & Design handle the cabinetry and finish work that follows the plumbing rough-in on the same permit timeline. All technicians are background-checked, drug-screened, and carry individual liability coverage, a vetting standard applied uniformly to every service call in Normal Heights, Kensington, and the surrounding neighborhoods. The New Jersey Street address sits west of Park Blvd in the section of University Heights closest to Hillcrest, where the residential grid slopes toward the Balboa Park canyon and older copper supply lines are prone to pinhole corrosion from mineral-rich municipal water. Gas-line installation and repair covers appliance hookups, meter-to-house piping, and leak testing with electronic gas sniffers — a scope that often parallels the electrical panel work at AQ Electric INC in North Park when a kitchen remodel adds both a gas range and upgraded circuit capacity. Tankless water-heater conversions are a growing segment of the workload, requiring upsized gas-supply lines and dedicated venting that differ from the standard atmospheric-vent configuration on the 40- and 50-gallon tank units common in the neighborhood's older homes.