Can you quote from photos?
Photos help with the first assessment, but active leaks usually need a site check before confirming the repair method.
Choose language
Singapore waterproofing contractor for wet-area membranes, roof and RC slab systems, external wall and facade coatings, PU injection grouting and basement tanking. Operated by Ezzogenics Pte Ltd.
Operated by Ezzogenics Pte Ltd.
Waterproofing Singapore focuses on leak diagnosis and repair planning for homes, commercial units and building maintenance teams. Common cases include toilet leaks, roof seepage, wall dampness, ceiling stains, balcony leaks, concrete cracks and water ingress around facade or window areas.
Photos help with the first assessment, but active leaks usually need a site check before confirming the repair method.
No. Some leaks can be handled with injection, sealant, coating or external repair, depending on the source.
Send photos of the stain, leak timing, wet area above or outside, recent works and whether the leak happens only during rain.
Yes. The team can review commercial toilets, roofs, balconies, external walls and maintenance repair scopes.
A waterproofing quote should start with the leak pattern. Rain-related leaks, toilet seepage, balcony ponding, ceiling stains and wall dampness point to different causes. Photos help, but timing, weather condition, recent renovation works and the location above or outside the stain are just as important.
The repair method must match the source. Some leaks can be handled with sealant, coating or localized crack repair, while others may need membrane replacement, hacking, injection or access from the external wall. The wrong method may hide the symptom for a short time without solving the leak.
For roofs, balconies and external walls, drainage and surface condition need to be checked before quoting. Ponding water, poor slope, open cracks, failed joints, porous render and old membrane layers can all affect whether a simple repair is enough.
For commercial properties, the quotation should also consider operating hours, affected tenants, safety access and whether the repair needs to be staged. A clear scope separates investigation, access, repair material and final testing so the owner can approve the right level of work.
Before the team is scheduled, the customer should confirm the exact address, contact person, access timing, photos, known constraints and any building management rules. This reduces back-and-forth and helps the quotation reflect the real site instead of a generic estimate.
Where measurements are needed, the first quote should be treated as a working scope until the key dimensions and site conditions are confirmed. This is especially important for repair, access, glass, waterproofing, facade and court work because small differences in access, material or surface condition can change the method.
The final written scope should make clear what is included, what is excluded, what assumptions were used and what still depends on site confirmation. That gives the customer, managing agent or owner a practical document to approve before manpower, materials or access equipment are arranged.
If there is an urgent timeline, it should be stated early together with any access limits, permit needs or preferred work window. That helps the team separate what can be arranged immediately from items that need measurement, approval or material preparation.