Built from the Ground Up. By Engineers Who Knew Better.
Two civil engineering classmates. Years of foundation inspections across the DMV. And one frustration that became a company: too many homeowners were being sold the wrong solution to the wrong problem.
The Beginning
Two Engineers. One Classroom. A DMV Foundation.
It started in a civil engineering classroom at the University of the District of Columbia in the late 1990s. Two students — both fascinated by what happens below ground level — shared notes, study sessions, and a habit of asking "why does that fail?" instead of just "how do we fix it?"
After graduation in the early 2000s, both joined ECS Mid-Atlantic's Chantilly, Virginia office — one of the most respected geotechnical and waterproofing inspection firms in the region. ECS gave them what no classroom could: thousands of hours behind the walls of real homes, diagnosing real problems, watching real contractors get it wrong.
For nearly a decade, they walked basements across Washington DC, Maryland, and Northern Virginia. They inspected new construction. They wrote forensic reports on failed waterproofing systems. They watched the same patterns appear over and over.
"We weren't building anything yet — but every inspection report was teaching us how things should be built. And how they shouldn't."
What We Learned at ECS
The Field Was Our Real Classroom
Working as field inspectors at ECS, we saw what most contractors don't get to see: the cause-and-effect chain that ends with a wet basement.
We studied the DMV's specific soil profile — heavy Piedmont clay, high seasonal water tables, freeze-thaw cycles that shift foundations year after year. We measured groundwater behavior across hundreds of properties. We learned which neighborhoods sat on clay seams, which had high water tables, and which had drainage problems hidden behind decades of paving and landscaping.
The patterns we kept seeing — and that no one was fixing
Shallow plastic drain channels installed above the footer, where water still had room to come in. Crack injections done with epoxy — rigid materials that crack again the next freeze. Exterior coatings sprayed onto wet walls that peeled off in a season. Sump systems without battery backup — which fail exactly when needed most, during storms.
The problem wasn't bad contractors. The problem was an industry that sold products, not solutions. Catalog systems. Franchise scripts. Commission-driven sales reps with no engineering background.
We knew there was a better way. And by 2005, we decided to build it.
Why We Started DMV Waterproofing
A Company That Engineers First, Sells Second
DMV Waterproofing was founded in 2005 in Rockville, Maryland with one principle: we would diagnose before we recommend, and recommend only what the home actually needs.
We rented a small space on N Stonestreet Avenue — the same street where our main office still operates today — and started with one in-house crew. No subcontractors. No franchise model. No catalog products. Every system we installed was engineered for the specific home, soil, and water table conditions on that property.
Word spread the way it does for engineer-led work: through homeowners who'd been burned by other companies. Realtors started referring us for pre-sale inspections. Structural engineers started recommending us when their clients needed waterproofing alongside foundation repair.
Twenty years later, we still inspect every job ourselves. We still refuse to use subcontractors. And we still tell homeowners when they don't need work — something a commission-driven competitor will never do.
"If you came to us thinking you needed a $15,000 interior drainage system, and the real problem is a clogged downspout, we'll tell you to call your gutter guy. That's the difference."
Our Founding Principles
Four Rules That Have Never Changed
Principle 01
Engineer-First Diagnosis
Every inspection is performed by someone trained to understand foundations, soil mechanics, and groundwater behavior. We diagnose the root cause before we recommend a solution. No exceptions.
Principle 02
No Subcontractors — Ever
Every person who touches your home is a full-time DMV Waterproofing employee. We don't sub out excavation, drainage, concrete work, or anything else. This rule has been non-negotiable since 2005.
Principle 03
Honest Pricing, Transparent Process
No high-pressure sales tactics. No bait-and-switch quotes. Free written estimates with itemized scope. If you don't need the work, we'll tell you.
Principle 04
Lifetime Warranty, on Paper
Our interior waterproofing systems carry a written lifetime warranty — for as long as your home stands. Exterior work: 25 years. Crack injection: 25 years.
From 1 Branch to 4
Twenty Years of Growing the Right Way
Founded in Rockville, MD
One small office on N Stonestreet Avenue. One in-house crew. One rule: no subcontractors. Started serving Montgomery County homeowners with engineer-led inspections.
Expanded to Manassas, VA
Demand from Prince William County and central Fairfax homeowners led to opening our second branch in Manassas. Same engineer-first standards. Same no-subcontractors rule.
Ashburn, VA Branch Opens
To serve growing demand from Loudoun County and western Fairfax — Brambleton, One Loudoun, Stone Ridge, Reston, Herndon — we opened our third branch on Leesburg Pike in Ashburn.
Kensington, MD — Serving DC
Our newest branch on Nicholson Lane brings dedicated coverage to Washington DC and lower Montgomery County — Chevy Chase, Silver Spring, Wheaton, and every DC quadrant.
The Shield Series™
Engineering Background, Engineered Systems
Two decades of field experience eventually became something we could systematize. We took everything we'd learned at ECS — every failure pattern, every soil condition, every water table behavior — and engineered seven systems specifically designed for DMV homes.
The Shield Series™ is what an engineer-founded company produces when it stops trying to sell catalog products and starts solving the problems it has seen for twenty years.
The seven Shield Series™ systems
FootingShield™ — interior drain tile at footer depth (up to 16" deep), not shallow plastic above the slab. WallShield™ — 2-layer exterior membrane done once, properly. CrackShield™ — polyurethane (not epoxy) pressure injection that flexes with foundation movement. GradingShield™, MoldShield™, CrawlShield™, YardShield™ — each engineered for the specific failure mode it addresses.
None of these systems came from a catalog. All of them were developed by engineers who had spent years documenting why catalog systems fail in DMV soil and climate. That's the difference between selling waterproofing and engineering waterproofing.
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