Gateway/Basement Flooding/St. Louis City

Basement Flooding
in St. Louis City, MO.

Basement flooding cleanup for St. Louis, MO. Source diagnosis first, sump failure, sewer back, footing seepage, or surface water; then extraction, drying, and source coordination. We work The Hill, Tower Grove South, Soulard, and the rest of the metro the same way.

If flooding has spread beyond the basement, our St. Louis City water damage restoration team can handle extraction, structural drying, moisture readings, and cleanup documentation together.

Gateway Basement Flooding Cleanup crew working in a St. Louis, MO home

On the ground in St. Louis

What we see in
St. Louis, every week.

Basement flooding in St. Louis City is dominated by the combined-sewer system. During heavy rain, the system surcharges and pushes wastewater up through basement floor drains across pre-1940 neighborhoods. Hundred-year-old clay laterals admit groundwater. The River des Peres corridor historically flooded entire neighborhoods. Karst features in south city add sinkhole-related drainage failures in some areas. We extract first, run Category 3 protocols when sewer is the source, identify the loss cause, and document for the carrier. Lateral repair and backwater valve conversations are MSD-promoted and come up at the rebuild stage across the City. The Soulard, Lafayette Square, and Shaw neighborhoods see the same patterns regularly. The carrier file captures the actual loss conditions, and the rebuild addresses underlying infrastructure issues rather than just the immediate damage. Source documentation and photo records support the carrier file from the first visit.

What makes basement flooding cleanup different in St. Louis.

City basements flood from a combination of sources during heavy rain that often overwhelms the 1880s-era combined-sewer infrastructure. Sewer surcharge through floor drains is the dominant pattern. Lateral seepage through limestone and rubble foundation walls during sustained rain is the second source, and the loess-over-limestone subsoil with karst features in south city adds drainage variability that’s hard to predict block to block. Direct surface water entering through low-elevation grade in River des Peres corridor neighborhoods is the third source. Diagnosis matters because Category 3 sewer backup and Category 1 seepage demand very different scopes, and the homeowner’s coverage path differs. We walk every City call before extracting. Limestone foundation seepage through mortar joints is a chronic baseline on most pre-1940 properties. The differential between event-specific and baseline conditions matters significantly for both scope and coverage, and we document accordingly.

Quick answers for St. Louis homeowners.

Combined sewer backed up into our Soulard basement. Allstate is our carrier. Do they cover historic district properties differently?

Same policy mechanics, same endorsement requirement. Allstate, State Farm, and American Family treat historic district properties under the standard sewer backup rider, with the same limits. Where historic properties differ is the per-claim cost runs higher because of materials and craftsmanship. We write the Xactimate scope to reflect actual costs for plaster repair, original brick cleaning, and salvageable historic flooring. If your rider limit is the standard $5,000, that often gets consumed quickly in a historic city home. Worth reviewing your limit at renewal.

MSD Project Clear is supposed to fix combined sewer overflows. Why are we still getting basement backups in Dutchtown?

Project Clear is a multi-decade consent-decree program, not a finished fix. As of 2026 the work in south city neighborhoods is ongoing. Until separation or relief sewers reach your block, the combined system still mixes stormwater and sanitary during heavy rain. We respond to the loss the same way regardless. MSD does promote backwater valve installation in known backup zones, and that is the single most effective property-level mitigation. We document each loss for your file.

Our 1908 Tower Grove South four-family has limestone basement walls and original cisterns. After a sewer backup, what is your approach?

Pre-1940 brick city housing requires a different sequence. We extract Category 3 water immediately and remove any porous materials at floor level per S500. Limestone walls are dried slowly with controlled airflow because aggressive drying spalls the stone. Original cisterns get inspected, often they are still functional drains or have been capped, and the cap may have failed. We document the lateral entry point for MSD and your sewer backup rider. Plaster walls above the waterline get metered for cavity moisture.

“We don’t tell you it’s mold because it looks like mold. We test, we plan, and we tell you what you don’t need to remediate.”

The Gateway approach

What’s included

What every St. Louis City
basement flooding response job covers.

Every Gateway basement flooding response job in St. Louis City runs to the same standard, same equipment, same documentation, same reputation backing every step. The full scope and FAQ live on our main basement flooding page; the short version is below.

  • Source diagnosed first, sump failure, sewer back, footing, or surface water
  • Category 3 sewer containment when applicable, PPE per IICRC S500
  • Standing water extracted, affected materials removed to clean cut
  • Antimicrobial, dehumidified, and verified dry before equipment leaves
  • Coordination with backflow/sump repair pros if the source needs fix

See the full basement flooding scope

How a St. Louis City call runs

Six steps. Same every job.

  1. 01

    Source diagnosed first.

    Before we extract a gallon, we identify the source, sump failure, sewer backup, foundation seepage, or surface water. Wrong diagnosis means it floods again.

  2. 02

    Standing water extraction.

    Truck-mount on the largest jobs. Standing water out within the first hour on-site.

  3. 03

    Cat-3 containment if sewer.

    Sewer backups get poly containment, negative air, and PPE before we cross the threshold. Non-negotiable.

  4. 04

    Affected materials removed.

    Drywall, insulation, carpet, pad, anything porous below the high-water line comes out and is documented for the claim.

  5. 05

    Antimicrobial and dry-out.

    Two-step antimicrobial application, then LGR dehumidifier and air mover stage until subfloor passes dry standard.

  6. 06

    Source repair coordination.

    We coordinate with your plumber or waterproofing pro on backflow valves, sump replacement, or foundation work, so it doesn’t happen again.

St. Louis City address. Water emergency.

Live phone, twenty-four seven. We’ll dispatch the nearest crew the moment we hang up.

Call (314) 947-3419

Carrier names and trademarks referenced on this site are the property of their respective owners. Gateway Water and Mold is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or a preferred contractor for any insurance carrier. We work alongside policyholders and their carriers on restoration claims; policyholders retain the right to choose their own restoration contractor.