Weep screed in Camp Pendleton, CA.
Weep screed for Camp Pendleton homes, done by licensed San Diego County stucco crews. Weep screed is the metal termination strip at the base of a stucco wall that drains water out of the stucco system and prevents stucco from contacting the foundation. When it corrodes, clogs, or is buried under soil or hardscape, water pools against the base of the wall and the stucco system starts to fail from the bottom up.
Why is weep screed different in North Coastal San Diego?
Carlsbad, Encinitas, and Oceanside weep screed replacement is frequently needed on homes from the 1980s and 1990s where the original galvanized screed has reached end of service life in the salt-air environment. New construction in these communities since 2000 typically used screed with better corrosion resistance, but older homes are on a regular replacement cycle. The insured crews we connect you with in North Coastal San Diego coordinate weep screed replacement with an overall moisture management assessment, since homes in this corridor often have multiple failure points that are addressed together for best results. The stucco rebuild at the foundation line after screed replacement uses a fiber-reinforced base coat for the scratch coat in high-exposure North Coastal locations.
What's included in weep screed in Camp Pendleton?
- Inspect the weep screed and the stucco condition at the base of the wall to determine the extent of corrosion and moisture damage
- Remove stucco from the foundation-line area to expose the existing weep screed and inspect the building paper behind it
- Remove corroded or missing weep screed and install new corrosion-resistant screeds at the correct height above the finished grade
- Replace degraded building paper behind the weep screed area and ensure proper overlap with the paper above
- Apply new scratch coat, brown coat, and finish coat to rebuild the stucco at the foundation line
- Confirm that the drainage path below the weep screed is clear and that soil or hardscape is not bridging the gap to the stucco above
When does a Camp Pendleton home need weep screed?
- The bottom edge of the stucco is cracking, staining, or showing rust streaks that trace to the weep screed behind it
- Soil or landscape rock is piled up against the base of the wall and covering the weep screed drainage gap
- Stucco at the base of the wall sounds hollow or has separated from the wall when the stucco higher up the wall is still sound
- A home inspection flagged the weep screed as buried, corroded, or missing at the foundation line
- Recurring cracks at the foundation-wall junction that come back every season
What do Camp Pendleton homeowners ask about weep screed?
How fast can you get to Camp Pendleton for weep screed?
Same-day service in Camp Pendleton on most weekdays. Call early for best same-day availability. After-hours emergency calls are answered by an on-call stucco crew, not a dispatcher.
What does weep screed cost in Camp Pendleton?
$800-$3,500 depending on the lineal footage of weep screed replacement required. Pricing is the same across San Diego County, with no mileage upcharge for Camp Pendleton. We confirm a flat-rate quote before any work starts.
How does Camp Pendleton's climate affect this service?
Coastal military community with marine-layer influence, salt air, mild year-round temperatures, and approximately 12 inches of annual rainfall.. Carlsbad, Encinitas, and Oceanside weep screed replacement is frequently needed on homes from the 1980s and 1990s where the original galvanized screed has reached end of service life in the salt-air environment.
What is weep screed and why does it matter?
Weep screed is a metal strip installed at the base of a stucco wall before the stucco is applied. It serves two purposes: it provides a clean termination for the bottom of the stucco system, and it has perforations that allow any water that has traveled down behind the stucco to drain out rather than pool against the foundation. When it is buried, corroded, or clogged, water sits against the base of the wall and drives moisture up into the lath and stucco above.
How common is weep screed corrosion in San Diego?
Very common, particularly in coastal communities and in homes built in the 1950s through 1970s where original galvanized screed has been exposed to salt air for decades. Coastal areas from La Jolla to Oceanside see the most corrosion. Inland areas see weep screed damage primarily from irrigation systems that spray against the base of the wall over many years.
Need weep screed in Camp Pendleton?
Call for a free quote. Flat-rate pricing, same-day service on most jobs.