Springfield Tree Trimming Pros

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Trees Growing Too Close to the Foundation
in Springfield, MA

A lot of Springfield's housing stock dates to the 1920s and 1930s, when trees were planted for shade right next to the house. Those trees are now 60 or 70 years old with root systems that have reached the foundation. Once roots find a crack in older masonry or parging, they work their way in and the crack gets wider every year.

Quick Answer

In Springfield, older homes in neighborhoods like the Upper Hill often have large trees that were planted close to the house generations ago. Tree roots can work into foundation cracks and make them bigger, and surface roots can redirect water toward the basement wall. Trimming the canopy reduces root growth, but a tree that is already too close may need to come down. An inspection tells you which situation you are in.

Trees Growing Too Close to the Foundation in Springfield

Telltale Signs

Warning Signs to Watch For

  • New cracks appearing in the foundation near the base of a large tree
  • Basement getting wet on the side of the house closest to a large tree
  • Surface roots visible running along the foundation wall or right up to it
  • Pavement or concrete next to the foundation heaving near tree roots
  • Foundation parging flaking off in a pattern that matches root growth below

Root Causes

What Causes Trees Growing Too Close to the Foundation?

1

Root Growth Into Foundation Cracks

Springfield's older homes often have poured concrete or stone foundations with small cracks that formed over decades. Roots follow moisture into those cracks and then expand as they grow, turning a small crack into a large one.

The Fix

Tree Removal and Root Extraction

If the tree is actively damaging the foundation, removing it and grinding the stump is usually the only way to stop the problem. The foundation crack still needs to be repaired after the roots are gone.

2

Canopy Blocking Drainage Away From Foundation

A large tree canopy close to the house sheds water at the drip line, which is the circle directly below the outer edge of the branches. If that drip line sits right at the foundation, heavy rain pours water toward the house instead of away from it.

The Fix

Crown Reduction to Move Drip Line

We reduce the canopy so the drip line falls further from the foundation. This alone will not fix root damage already done, but it reduces ongoing water pressure against the wall.

Self-Diagnosis

Which Cause Applies to You?

Check the signs you're observing to narrow down the likely root cause before your inspection.

What You're Seeing Root Growth Into Foundation Cracks Canopy Blocking Drainage Away From Foundation
Cracks in foundation wall are widening near visible surface roots
Basement leaks on the side closest to the tree after heavy rain
Roots are visible entering or growing alongside the foundation
Tree canopy extends over the roof and foundation on the wet side
Both root damage and water intrusion are present on the same side