The Article That Finally Explains Why Brookfield Floods the Way It Does — Written by the Plumbing Company That Has Been Headquartered in Brookfield for 48 Years and Has Seen the Inside of More Brookfield Basements Than Anyone Else in the Village
There is something we need to say before anything else in this guide: Brookfield is our home. Suburban Plumbing Experts has been headquartered at 9100 Plainfield Road in Brookfield, Illinois since 1978. Our trucks leave from Brookfield every morning. Our plumbers live in Brookfield, in Riverside, in North Riverside, in the surrounding communities that share Salt Creek, the combined sewer infrastructure, and the specific plumbing challenges that come with living in one of the western Cook County suburbs that Samuel Eberly Gross built for working-class families starting in 1889.
We have been in the basements of Brookfield homes when the water was still coming in. We have installed overhead sewers in the bungalows on the east side and backflow valves in the ranches west of the zoo. We have camera-inspected clay tile laterals in homes built the same decade our company was founded — and laterals built decades before that. We know Brookfield’s plumbing situation the way you know a house you have lived in for half a century. And what we know is this: Brookfield’s flooding and plumbing challenges are not random bad luck and they are not a failure of public infrastructure. They are the direct and predictable consequence of a village built on a specific geography, with a specific housing vintage, served by a specific sewer system — and they are more actively being addressed by the Village of Brookfield right now than most residents realize.
This guide covers all of it. What makes Brookfield’s flooding situation genuinely different from newer suburbs. What Salt Creek has to do with it. What the Village of Brookfield’s Flood Mitigation Program covers and how to apply before signing any contractor agreement. What the homes built from the 1890s through the 1960s — the backbone of Brookfield’s housing stock — have running beneath them in 2026. And what every Brookfield homeowner should do before the next significant rain event makes the issue urgent.
What Makes Brookfield’s Plumbing and Flooding Situation Genuinely Different
The Grossdale Origins — What the Village’s Founding Tells You About Its Pipes
Brookfield was founded in 1889 as Grossdale — Samuel Eberly Gross’s working-class suburb along the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad line. Gross offered suburban lots and house designs at prices affordable to Chicago factory workers and tradespeople, and the village grew rapidly through the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The name changed to Brookfield in 1905 — named for Salt Creek, which flows through the village — but the housing typology Gross established remained constant: dense, modest, well-built homes on compact lots, constructed for working families who valued proximity to the railroad and the affordability of suburban land.
The plumbing implication of that founding history is straightforward: Brookfield’s oldest homes were built between 1889 and 1920, a second major wave went up in the 1920s and 1930s, and the postwar boom added ranch homes through the 1950s and 1960s. A significant portion of Brookfield’s current housing stock is now 65 to 135 years old. The pipes beneath those homes — the clay tile sewer laterals, the cast iron drain lines, the galvanized supply lines in the oldest homes — were installed when the homes were built. They have been under Salt Creek watershed groundwater pressure, Cook County’s freeze-thaw cycling, and the root systems of the mature trees that make Brookfield’s established neighborhoods beautiful for their entire service life. The village that Gross built for working families is now a village of aging plumbing infrastructure that requires the same informed attention he brought to the original construction.
Salt Creek — The Waterway That Gave Brookfield Its Name and Its Flooding Pattern
Brookfield was renamed after Salt Creek — and Salt Creek has been central to the village’s flooding story ever since. Salt Creek is a 43.4-mile stream that flows through northeastern Illinois, primarily within Cook and DuPage Counties, before joining the Des Plaines River in Riverside. By 1932, the Illinois Sanitary Water Board had labeled Salt Creek a “sewer” — a designation reflecting the reality that a rapidly developing suburban area of 160 square miles was using Salt Creek as a de facto storm drain. By the 1950s, increasing storm sewer runoff combined with Salt Creek’s shallow, twisting nature was producing recurring flooding in every community along its banks, including Brookfield.
The state undertook a significant improvement project in the 1960s — dredging the channel, widening it, and straightening choke points including a narrow, meandering stretch through Kiwanis Park in Brookfield. Those improvements reduced flooding risk along the creek corridor. They did not eliminate it. On July 24, 2010, Brookfield received approximately 7 inches of rain in a 24-hour period. Residents throughout the village woke to flooded basements. The areas near Salt Creek sustained the most severe damage. The 2010 event was the most documented recent example of what happens in Brookfield when significant rain events combine with the creek’s drainage characteristics — but it was not unprecedented, and it was not the last time Brookfield homeowners found water in their basements after a major storm.
Properties in Brookfield near the Salt Creek corridor should confirm their FEMA flood zone status using the FEMA Flood Map Service Center. Properties within Special Flood Hazard Areas with federally backed mortgages are required to carry flood insurance — and even properties outside the designated flood plain benefit from understanding their proximity to the creek’s historical flood extent.
The Combined Sewer System — What It Is and Why Brookfield Has It
Brookfield, like Chicago and most of the inner-ring suburbs that developed before the mid-20th century, operates on a combined sewer system. A combined sewer carries both stormwater runoff and sanitary sewage in the same underground pipes. During dry weather, the system handles normal flow without issue. During significant rain events, the combined volume of stormwater entering the system and sanitary waste from every home and business in the village can exceed the system’s capacity to discharge to the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District.
When that capacity ceiling is exceeded — which happens during the kind of significant storm events that Brookfield has documented repeatedly — pressure in the combined sewer system reverses. That reversed pressure travels backward through residential sewer laterals, reaches the lowest drain point in the home, and produces the sewage-odored basement floor drain backup that Brookfield homeowners have been experiencing for decades. This is not a malfunction of your home’s plumbing. It is a hydraulic condition produced by a regional infrastructure capacity limit — and the solution is a private-side flood control installation that physically prevents the reversed sewer pressure from entering your home.
The Village of Brookfield has documented its combined sewer system status through its MS4 designation — Municipal Separate Storm Sewer Systems — which the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency assigned to Brookfield as part of the NPDES permitting program. The MS4 designation reflects the reality that Brookfield’s storm and sanitary systems interact in ways that require active stormwater management. The Village’s Flood Mitigation Program — which funds flood control installations for Brookfield homeowners — is a direct response to the combined sewer reality that the MS4 designation represents.
The Cook County CDBG-DR Funding — Federal Money Flowing Into Brookfield Right Now
Beyond the Village’s own program, Cook County received federal CDBG-DR funding in 2025 — Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery dollars specifically allocated in response to severe storms that occurred in 2023 and 2024 in suburban Cook County. This federal recovery funding is being administered through Cook County’s Department of Planning and Development and supports stormwater management and flood mitigation efforts in suburban Cook County communities including those in the western Cook County corridor where Brookfield is located.
Cook County’s American Rescue Plan Act stormwater management initiative — a $20 million effort aimed at building climate resilience across suburban Cook County — has also funded sewer backup prevention programs in the region. As confirmed by reporting from Underground Construction, eligible homeowners can receive 50% reimbursement for the cost of installing backflow devices (up to $3,000) or overhead sewers (up to $5,000) through Cook County-level programs.
The combination of the Village of Brookfield’s own Flood Mitigation Program and Cook County-level programs means that Brookfield homeowners have access to multiple potential funding sources for flood control installation. Confirming current availability and eligibility for each program — before signing any contractor agreement — is the single most important financial step a Brookfield homeowner can take before beginning flood control work.
The Village of Brookfield Flood Mitigation Program — What Most Residents Don’t Know Exists
This is the most important piece of information in this guide for Brookfield homeowners who have experienced basement flooding or sewer backup:
The Village of Brookfield’s Flood Mitigation Program offers residents up to 50% reimbursement of the total cost of qualifying flood control installations — with permit fees waived for all covered work.
Confirmed directly from the Village of Brookfield Community Development Department: the program offers 50% reimbursement of total improvement costs, with permit fees waived — not discounted, waived — for any work covered under the program. Applications are submitted through the Village’s online portal at cloudpermit.com. The Village can be reached at 708-485-7344 and Village Hall is located at 8820 Brookfield Ave.
What the Program Covers — Three Qualified Installation Types
The Brookfield Flood Mitigation Program covers three specific flood control installation types, each with its own Village-published technical exhibit:
Exhibit 1 — Overhead Sewer System: An overhead sewer conversion raises the home’s lowest drain connections above the level of the street sewer, physically preventing combined sewer surcharge from entering the home through below-grade floor drains and fixtures. An overhead sewer is the most comprehensive flood control option available — it eliminates the gravity connection between your basement fixtures and the street sewer entirely. In a Brookfield home, a properly executed overhead sewer conversion typically costs between $12,000 and $30,000 depending on the home’s plumbing configuration and the number of below-grade fixtures to be converted. The program covers 50% of that cost.
Exhibit 2 — Backflow Prevention Valve With Bypass Pump: A backflow prevention valve with integrated bypass pump installs on the sewer lateral inside the home. The valve closes automatically when sewer pressure reverses during a surcharge event, preventing backup from entering the home. The bypass pump handles any wastewater that accumulates during the closure period, allowing limited fixture use even during a surcharge event. This configuration is appropriate for homes that need to maintain some below-grade fixture use during flood events. Installation typically costs between $3,500 and $7,000 depending on the specific system and access conditions.
Exhibit 3 — Backflow Prevention Valve: A standard backwater valve without a bypass pump installs on the sewer lateral and automatically closes when sewer pressure reverses. This is the most common and most affordable flood control installation for Brookfield homes that experience sewer backup flooding. When the valve is closed during a surcharge event, below-grade fixtures cannot be used — but the home is protected from backup. Standard backwater valve installation in a Brookfield home typically costs between $2,500 and $6,000. The program covers 50% of that cost with permit fees waived.
How to Apply — The Process That Matters Before You Sign Anything
Applications are submitted through the Village of Brookfield’s online portal at cloudpermit.com. Before applying, you need a licensed plumber to assess your home and determine the appropriate installation type and scope. The Village requires specific documentation — the program agreement, proof of licensed contractor, permit application — all of which must be in order before work begins to qualify for reimbursement.
Critical: Do not sign a contractor agreement before contacting the Village about the program. The reimbursement process requires documentation that begins before work is performed. A homeowner who calls us, reviews the scope, and applies for the program before we start can access the 50% reimbursement and the permit fee waiver. A homeowner who has the work done first and then applies has a much harder path to the same money. Contact the Village Community Development Department at 708-485-7344 first. That call costs nothing. The permit fee waiver alone on a flood control installation can save $500 to $1,500.
Brookfield’s Lead Service Line Replacement Program — The Other Active Initiative Most Residents Don’t Know About
Separate from the Flood Mitigation Program, the Village of Brookfield has an active Lead Service Line Replacement program administered through the Public Works Department. Brookfield homes built before 1950 — which represents a significant portion of the village’s housing stock — may have original lead service lines connecting the water main in the street to the home’s internal plumbing.
The Village’s lead service line replacement program addresses the public-side portion of lead service line connections. The private-side service line — from the curb stop to the home’s internal plumbing — remains the homeowner’s responsibility. For Brookfield homeowners in pre-1950 homes who have not confirmed their service line material, the Public Works Department at 708-485-7344 is the first contact for understanding the program and confirming whether a lead service line is present on the public side of the connection.
Our lead service line replacement services cover the private-side work that the Village’s program does not — and we work alongside the Village’s public-side replacement program to ensure both sides of the connection are addressed simultaneously. Replacing only the public side while leaving a private-side lead service line in place is the most common and most expensive mistake Brookfield homeowners make during lead service line remediation.
The Three Flooding Types in Brookfield — What Each Requires
Type 1: Combined Sewer Surcharge Backup
This is the flooding type that the Village’s Flood Mitigation Program was created to address — and it is the most common flooding complaint from Brookfield homeowners following significant storm events. During heavy rain, the combined sewer system capacity is exceeded, pressure reverses through residential laterals, and sewage-odored water enters through the basement floor drain.
Diagnostic signature: Water with sewage odor entering through the basement floor drain during or after heavy rain. The odor is the critical distinguishing characteristic — it confirms the water is coming from the sewer system, not from groundwater. Occurs during or immediately after significant rain events rather than during gradual wet periods.
What works: Backwater valve installation or overhead sewer conversion, covered by the Village’s Flood Mitigation Program at 50% reimbursement with permit fees waived. Our sewer backup services cover all of Brookfield — and because we are headquartered on Plainfield Road, our response times to Brookfield calls are faster than any competitor dispatching from outside the village.
Type 2: Salt Creek Corridor Overland and Groundwater Flooding
Properties near Salt Creek in Brookfield face a flooding type that is distinct from the combined sewer surcharge backup that affects the broader village. During major rain events, Salt Creek’s water level rises rapidly — the creek drains a watershed of 160 square miles, meaning that upstream rainfall from communities across Cook and DuPage Counties reaches Brookfield’s portion of the creek hours after the rain itself. Properties adjacent to or near the creek can experience overland flooding from creek overflow and groundwater intrusion from the elevated water table that accompanies high creek levels.
Diagnostic signature: Water entering without sewage odor. Gradual entry through the floor slab, wall-floor joint, or sump pit. Correlates with sustained wet periods and elevated creek levels rather than the immediate storm intensity peak. May persist for days after rain stops as the upstream watershed drainage reaches the Brookfield section of Salt Creek.
What works: A properly functioning sump pump with battery backup is the primary defense against groundwater intrusion from elevated creek water table. Battery backup is non-negotiable for Salt Creek corridor properties — the storms that produce the worst creek flooding are the same storms that produce the longest power outages. A sump pump without battery backup during an extended power outage is a sump pump that is not working during the event that matters most. For properties with significant overland flooding from creek overflow, French drain installation and grading assessment are additional tools that our drainage services team can evaluate with an on-site assessment.
Type 3: Groundwater Intrusion From Saturated Soil
Separate from Salt Creek corridor flooding, Brookfield’s clay-heavy Cook County soil creates groundwater intrusion conditions throughout the village during sustained wet periods. Clay soil drains poorly — rainfall that saturates the soil in a clay-heavy environment creates persistent hydrostatic pressure against basement foundations for days or weeks after the rain event itself. This is the flooding type that produces water in the basement without sewage odor and without a correlation to a specific storm peak.
Diagnostic signature: Water entering without sewage odor during or after sustained rain or snowmelt periods. Entry through the floor slab, wall-floor joint, or window wells. Persists after the rain stops because the surrounding soil remains saturated. Does not respond to backwater valve installation because it has no connection to the sewer system.
What works: Sump pump with battery backup, window well covers, and in persistent cases, interior waterproofing or French drain installation. The specific solution depends on the entry point and severity — an on-site assessment determines the appropriate approach.
Brookfield’s Housing Stock — What It Means for Pipes
Brookfield’s housing stock is one of the most consistent in the western Cook County suburbs — the working-class bungalow and ranch typology that Gross established in 1889 remained dominant through the postwar period. The result is a village where the majority of homes fall into three construction eras, each with its own plumbing profile. Our complete Chicago home age plumbing guide covers what every construction decade means for specific pipe materials, lateral conditions, and maintenance priorities throughout the Chicagoland housing stock.
Pre-1940 Brookfield Homes: The Grossdale Generation
Brookfield homes built before 1940 — the original Grossdale-era bungalows and the interwar additions — are now 85 to 135 years old. The plumbing installed in these homes reflects the materials and methods of the late 19th and early 20th centuries:
Sewer laterals: Clay tile, universally. A clay tile lateral now 85 to 135 years old in a Brookfield neighborhood lined with mature elms, oaks, and maples has experienced root intrusion at every joint for most of its service life. The root systems of Brookfield’s established trees are aggressive, consistent, and patient. They find the mineral-rich environment inside a clay tile lateral through the smallest joint gaps and expand those gaps over decades. Camera inspection of a pre-1940 Brookfield lateral — and we have performed this inspection hundreds of times — almost always finds root intrusion, joint displacement, and in older laterals, partial collapse or pipe belly conditions that standard drain cleaning can temporarily address but cannot permanently fix. These laterals need camera inspection, not assumption.
Cast iron interior drain lines: Now 85 to 135 years old, approaching or past the end of their reliable service life. Our guide to why Chicago’s cast iron pipes are failing right now covers the progressive corrosion and pitting failure pattern in detail — slow drains, recurring blockages, visible corrosion at joints, and eventually failure that requires section replacement or full repiping.
Lead or galvanized supply lines: Some Brookfield homes from the pre-1940 era still have original supply line materials. Lead service lines are addressed through the Village’s Lead Service Line Replacement program. Galvanized interior supply lines corrode from the inside out, producing progressive pressure loss, rust-colored water, and eventual pinhole failures that create water damage in finished spaces.
1940s–1960s Brookfield Homes: The Postwar Ranch Generation
The postwar ranch homes that filled out Brookfield’s residential blocks from the late 1940s through the 1960s are now 60 to 80 years old. This generation of homes has a specific plumbing profile that we see consistently in Brookfield service calls:
Sewer laterals: Clay tile in earlier homes, transitioning to early PVC in homes built after the mid-1960s. The clay tile laterals in this generation are now 60 to 80 years old — younger than the Grossdale-era laterals but old enough to have significant root intrusion and joint displacement in the tree-lined Brookfield streetscape.
Copper supply lines: The postwar ranches were the first generation to receive copper supply lines as standard — and those copper lines are now 60 to 80 years old in Brookfield’s hard water environment. Chicago-area water hardness of 8 to 11 grains per gallon deposits calcium scale inside copper fittings and accelerates pitting corrosion at the 40-to-60-year mark. Copper supply lines in this age range should be assessed for pitting corrosion, particularly at solder joints and elbows.
Sump pumps: Many of Brookfield’s postwar ranches received sump pump installations during the flooding events of the 1970s and 1980s. Those original installations are now 40 to 55 years old — the sump pump itself has almost certainly been replaced, but the pit liner, discharge line, and check valve from the original installation may still be in place. A sump pump system that has never been fully assessed is a system that may be running a modern pump on 50-year-old infrastructure.
Post-1970 Construction: Better Pipes, Same Flooding Risk
Brookfield homes built after 1970 have PVC laterals and modern supply systems in generally good condition. For this generation, the plumbing concern is not pipe condition but flooding risk — the combined sewer surcharge that affects every home in the village regardless of construction date, and the Salt Creek corridor flooding that affects properties near the waterway regardless of how new the home is. Sump pump age assessment and flood control installation are the priorities for post-1970 Brookfield homes.
What Brookfield Homeowners Should Do Right Now — In Priority Order
Step 1: Contact the Village of Brookfield Community Development Department at 708-485-7344 about the Flood Mitigation Program before signing any flood control contract. The 50% reimbursement and permit fee waiver require an application process that begins before work is performed. This call costs nothing and the permit fee waiver alone can save hundreds to over a thousand dollars on a qualifying installation.
Step 2: Assess your sump pump age and battery backup status. Every Brookfield home — particularly those near Salt Creek and in the older neighborhoods with clay-heavy soil — needs a functioning sump pump with battery backup. If your pump is more than 7 years old, has no battery backup, or has never been professionally serviced, address it before the next storm season. The storm that causes the worst flooding in Brookfield is consistently the storm that also takes out the power.
Step 3 (Pre-1960 homes): Schedule a sewer camera inspection. A Brookfield bungalow or early ranch built before 1960 has a clay tile lateral now 65 to 135 years old, in a neighborhood with mature trees that have been working their roots into every joint for decades. Camera inspection is the only way to know what that lateral actually looks like. The findings determine whether drain cleaning is a viable ongoing maintenance approach or whether targeted repair, relining, or replacement is warranted.
Step 4 (Pre-1950 homes): Confirm your service line material. Contact Village Public Works at 708-485-7344 about the Lead Service Line Replacement program. If a lead service line is present on the public side, understand what the Village’s program covers and what your private-side responsibility is before the Village’s replacement crew arrives.
Step 5 (Salt Creek corridor properties): Confirm your FEMA flood zone status using the FEMA Flood Map Service Center with your specific address. If you are in a Special Flood Hazard Area, flood insurance is required for federally backed mortgages and strongly advisable for all property owners. Contact your insurance agent specifically about sewer and drain backup coverage — most standard homeowner’s policies exclude sewer backup, and the rider costs $50 to $150 per year against the risk of a $30,000 sewage remediation event.
Why We Are the Right Call for Brookfield Specifically
We are not going to fill this section with generic claims about quality and professionalism. Every plumber in Chicago says those things. What we are going to say is this: we are headquartered on Plainfield Road. When a Brookfield homeowner calls us at 2am during the kind of storm that floods Salt Creek and surcharges the combined sewer, we are not dispatching from the North Shore or from the south suburbs. We are dispatching from the same village the call is coming from.
We have been in Brookfield basements during the 2010 flood event. We have installed overhead sewers in the bungalows on the east side and camera-inspected laterals that were laid before the Brookfield Zoo opened in 1934. We understand Salt Creek’s drainage pattern, the combined sewer system’s behavior during a 4-inch rain event, the specific root pressure that Brookfield’s mature tree canopy puts on clay tile lateral joints, and what the Village’s Flood Mitigation Program requires for proper documentation. No competitor with a Brookfield service page and a call center in a different county has that knowledge. We have been building it since 1978.
Frequently Asked Questions: Plumbing and Flood Control in Brookfield
My Brookfield basement has flooded twice in the last three years. Both times it had a sewage smell. What is actually happening?
Combined sewer surcharge. During significant rain events, Brookfield’s combined sewer system receives more stormwater than it can discharge to the MWRD. When that happens, pressure in the main sewer reverses and travels backward through your sewer lateral to the lowest drain point in your home — typically the basement floor drain. The sewage odor confirms the water is coming from the sewer system. The solution is a backflow prevention valve or overhead sewer conversion that physically prevents the reversed sewer pressure from reaching your basement. The Village’s Flood Mitigation Program covers 50% of the installation cost with permit fees waived. Call 708-485-7344 before signing any contractor agreement.
My Brookfield home was built in 1928. Should I be worried about my pipes?
Yes — but in a specific and manageable way. A 1928 Brookfield home has a clay tile sewer lateral now nearly 100 years old, almost certainly with root intrusion at most joints given Brookfield’s mature tree canopy. It likely has cast iron interior drain lines in the same age range. It may have original galvanized supply lines or early copper that is now approaching the end of its reliable service life in Chicago’s hard water environment. None of these conditions are emergencies today — but none of them are safe to assume are fine without a professional assessment. A sewer camera inspection tells you what the lateral looks like. A plumbing assessment tells you what the interior pipe condition is. Those two pieces of information give you a maintenance plan instead of a series of expensive surprises.
Does Brookfield have a no-grant program — nothing like Oak Park or Willow Springs?
Brookfield absolutely has its own program. The Village of Brookfield Flood Mitigation Program offers 50% reimbursement of flood control installation costs with permit fees waived — a meaningful financial benefit that most Brookfield homeowners do not know about. The misconception that Brookfield has no assistance program likely comes from outdated information or from competitors who have not done the research. The program is active, administered through the Community Development Department, and applications are submitted online through cloudpermit.com. Call 708-485-7344 to confirm current availability before beginning any flood control work.
How does the Brookfield Flood Mitigation Program interact with Cook County’s programs?
They are separate programs that may be available simultaneously depending on the specific installation and the current funding status of each program. The Village’s Flood Mitigation Program is administered locally by the Community Development Department. Cook County’s programs are administered through the County’s stormwater management and CDBG-DR funding channels. A Brookfield homeowner who qualifies for both programs should understand the documentation requirements of each before beginning work — our team has experience navigating both and can advise on the documentation needed at each stage of the project.
My sump pump is 12 years old and still working. Do I need to replace it?
A 12-year-old sump pump in Brookfield has exceeded the typical 10-to-15-year service life benchmark — and more importantly, it has done so while managing the elevated groundwater and storm event conditions that Brookfield’s Clay-heavy soil and Salt Creek watershed create. Working is not the same as reliable. A pump that is running is a pump that is running right now. A pump that fails during the 4-inch rain event that is also causing a power outage is the event that produces the basement flooding that the pump was installed to prevent. Proactive replacement at 10 to 12 years costs $400 to $900 for the pump. Reactive cleanup after a sump pump failure during a significant storm event costs multiples of that. Schedule an assessment — we will tell you honestly whether the pump is showing wear that warrants replacement or whether it has service life remaining.
Need Plumbing or Flood Control in Brookfield? You’re Calling the Company That Lives Here.
We have been headquartered in Brookfield at 9100 Plainfield Road since 1978. We perform backwater valve installation, overhead sewer conversion, sump pump service, sewer camera inspection, lead service line replacement, drain cleaning, and complete plumbing service throughout Brookfield — with full knowledge of the Village’s Flood Mitigation Program, Salt Creek’s flooding patterns, and the specific plumbing conditions in Grossdale-era and postwar Brookfield homes. Written quotes before we start, permits on every job, full documentation for Village program reimbursement, our own licensed plumbers in Brookfield on every call. We are your neighbors. Send us a message and we’ll be back to you fast.
Or call us directly: 708-801-6530
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Suburban Plumbing Sewer Line & Drain Cleaning Experts
Licensed & Insured | Open 24 Hours | Headquartered in Brookfield at 9100 Plainfield Road | Serving Brookfield and Chicagoland Since 1978
📞 Brookfield: 708-801-6530 | 🚨 Emergency: 708-518-7765


