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Burst & Frozen Pipe in Mesquite, TX

  • On call around the clock in Mesquite and across DFW
  • Licensed, insured, IICRC-certified technicians
  • We log the loss and bill your carrier for you
Call (469) 895-7900 Serving Mesquite24/7 Emergency Response
Water-stained wall and swollen baseboard from a burst pipe in a Mesquite, TX home after a winter freeze
Burst & Frozen Pipe in Mesquite, TX

Credentialed & on call in Mesquite

Post-Thaw Flood Response for Mesquite

Mesquite’s housing east of Dallas skews older than most DFW suburbs — downtown Mesquite and the neighborhoods near Palos Verdes and Creek Crossing Estates include substantial 1960s and 1970s construction with aging supply lines under slabs on clay that has shifted them for 50-plus years. SummitFrame Restore runs freeze-event response across Mesquite: after a hard freeze we prioritize homes with active, spreading water, extract fast, and dry the framing and drywall to a verified standard.

  • 24/7 freeze response across Mesquite
  • Wall-cavity and subfloor drying, not just the visible floor
  • The burst documented and billed to your insurer
Burst & Frozen Pipe work underway in a Mesquite, TX home

What Sends Water Into Mesquite Homes

The frozen-and-burst lines we respond to across Mesquite usually fail at one of these points:

Burst pipes after a Texas freeze

Mesquite’s 1960s–70s homes run poorly insulated lines through attics and exterior walls. A hard freeze cracks them, and the flood arrives on the thaw — Winter Storm Uri hit older Mesquite streets hard. These are the lines that crack in an Arctic front and flood the rooms below once the ice melts.

Spring hail and aging roof damage

Mesquite’s 1960s and 1970s homes typically carry aging asphalt shingle roofs more susceptible to hail than newer materials. Storms tracking northeast through Dallas County hit Mesquite regularly, and older shingles crack or delaminate from hail that wouldn’t damage newer roofing.

Creek corridor stormwater exposure

Properties near Duck Creek and South Mesquite Creek face higher moisture exposure during spring storms. These waterways back up when 3–5 inch rain events hit in a short window, and low-lying properties see pooling that standard drainage can’t handle fast enough.

Our Burst & Frozen Pipe Process

1

Stop & Map

We confirm the source is off, then map the wet area — including the wall cavities and subfloor the water tracked into.

2

Extract

Truck-mounted extractors and pumps pull standing water from floors, carpet, and pad before it spreads further.

3

Dry the Cavities

Air movers, dehumidifiers, and wall-cavity ventilation dry the framing and drywall to a verified standard.

4

Restore

We repair drywall, flooring, and paint, returning the rooms to how they looked before the freeze.

Why Mesquite Homeowners Call Us First

  • Dispatched locally, any hour. Our Dallas crews are on the road to Mesquite quickly, and the voice on the phone is a real technician rather than a routed call center.
  • Certified to the S500 standard. IICRC-trained techs work to industry benchmarks and start logging moisture readings the first hour they're on site.
  • The carrier gets billed, not you. We coordinate with your adjuster and carry the claim paperwork so you aren't chasing it.
  • Dry-out and rebuild, one team. The same crew that dries the structure puts it back together — nothing stalls in a handoff to another contractor.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Mesquite prone to burst pipes after a Texas freeze?

Yes — it’s one we see regularly here. Mesquite’s 1960s–70s homes run poorly insulated lines through attics and exterior walls. A hard freeze cracks them, and the flood arrives on the thaw — Winter Storm Uri hit older Mesquite streets hard. For Mesquite homeowners, that’s exactly the kind of source that floods the rooms below before it’s caught, which is why we trace and confirm the origin before we start the burst & frozen pipe work.

Why do Mesquite pipes burst when other regions’ don’t?

Because the North Texas climate is usually mild, water lines run through unconditioned attics and along exterior walls with little insulation — the exact spots that freeze first when an Arctic front drops in. Water expands as it freezes, the pressure cracks the pipe, and the leak often doesn’t show until the ice melts. By then the line has been splitting for hours.

How long does drying take after a burst pipe in Mesquite?

Extraction is usually a few hours; drying the wall cavities and subfloor the water tracked into is the longer phase — typically three to five days of air movers, dehumidifiers, and cavity ventilation, with daily moisture checks. A burst caught quickly dries faster than one that ran behind the drywall for hours before it was found.

Burst Pipe in Mesquite? Call Now.

A cracked line floods fast once it thaws. Reach our Mesquite crew 24/7 — the sooner we extract, the less wall and flooring the burst takes with it.

Call Now: (469) 895-7900