Foundation repair · West Lake Hills, TX

Foundation repair in West Lake Hills and Rollingwood's canyon homes.

West Lake Hills and Rollingwood occupy Austin's steepest residential ground — canyon-edge lots, terraced builds, and five decades of ambitious architecture bolted into the limestone above the lake. Expansive clay barely figures here; slope mechanics and water do.

SEEN IN WEST LAKE HILLS THIS SEASON
  • Aging retaining systems
  • Downhill-corner settlement
  • Storm-water concentration on grade
  • Rebuild-era differential

The stock spans 1960s originals to current full-rebuilds, often on the same street. Older homes carry aging retaining systems and decades-old fill; new builds carry engineering that demands documentation. Both benefit from the same thing: precise elevation baselines.

BEE CAVES ROAD'S RIDGES TO ROLLINGWOOD'S GRID, THE CANYON RIM THROUGHOUT — THE CLOSE-IN LAKE-COUNTRY LEG OF OUR AUSTIN RUN.

What we see in West Lake Hills

The local patterns, specifically.

LOCAL PATTERN 01

Aging retaining systems

1960s–80s terraced lots rely on walls now past middle age. A leaning, cracking, or weeping wall above or below the house is foundation-relevant and belongs in the same inspection.

LOCAL PATTERN 02

Downhill-corner settlement

The canyon classic: the tallest, most fill-dependent corner settles when storm water concentrates there. View-side doors racking is the early tell.

LOCAL PATTERN 03

Storm-water concentration on grade

Canyon lots collect uphill neighbors' runoff. When a new build or hardscape upslope changes the flow, downslope foundations notice within a season or two.

LOCAL PATTERN 04

Rebuild-era differential

Full rebuilds on old pads inherit the previous structure's fill history. High-spec finishes telegraph quarter-inch movement early — an advantage when measured rather than patched.

The local soil story: Canyon limestone with thin soils, serious grades, and engineered fill on nearly every buildable pad. Native rock is immovable; placed fill, retaining structures, and concentrated storm water are the entire movement story. Drainage design is the foundation system — and it ages.

Our work near West Lake Hills

Real foundation repair across West Lake Hills and the corridor.

Cracked brick alongside a window jamb on a settling home, noted during a foundation evaluation
Cracked brick alongside a window jamb, typical of the exterior foundation damage Motmot repairs near West Lake Hills.
Hairline crack crossing stucco beside a split-face block column at a commercial building with foundation movement
Hairline crack across stucco beside split-face block column at a commercial building — the kind of exterior warning sign Motmot inspects on homes like those across West Lake Hills.
Zigzag crack and trim separation where the wall meets the ceiling in a settling home
Zigzag crack and trim separation where wall meets ceiling — an interior warning sign of the kind Motmot documents on homes like those across West Lake Hills.
Drywall crack spreading from a frame corner toward the crown molding, a sign of foundation settling
Crack spreading from frame corner across yellow wall below crown molding, the sort of interior symptom Motmot inspectors evaluate near West Lake Hills.

West Lake Hills specifics

Asked by West Lake Hills homeowners.

Often, yes — terraced lots make walls and foundations one mechanical system. A failing wall changes the load and water path for everything above and below it. We assess both together; treating them separately is how canyon repairs go wrong.

Nearby

Also serving the communities around West Lake Hills.

AustinBee CaveRollingwood · page coming soonSunset Valley · page coming soon

Get the measured truth about your West Lake Hills foundation.

Free elevation survey, written summary, and a straight answer — repair, monitor, or relax.