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King City’s original homes were built during the same era that produced galvanized-steel-plumbed houses across the Portland metro’s suburbs — the 1960s, when galvanized was the standard and no one expected homeowners to still be living with these pipes six decades later. The corrosion process inside galvanized pipe is relentless and irreversible: iron oxide forms on the interior wall year after year, compounding into a progressively thicker layer of scale that narrows the effective pipe diameter. A three-quarter-inch supply line that originally delivered robust water pressure to every fixture in the house now delivers a fraction of that flow through a constricted channel barely wider than a drinking straw.
The impact on daily life in a King City home is cumulative. Showers that once ran strong now produce a modest stream. The washing machine takes longer to fill. Running the kitchen faucet while a toilet refills causes both to slow to a trickle. These are not separate problems — they are all symptoms of the same systemic pipe deterioration. A whole-house repipe with PEX replaces every corroded galvanized line with smooth, corrosion-proof pipe that restores water pressure to what modern fixtures are designed for. For King City’s single-story ranch homes with crawl space access, the work is straightforward and typically completed in a single day. The transformation is immediate — homeowners consistently report that the improvement in water pressure and water quality feels like moving into a new home.
Schedule a repiping assessment
King City’s 1980s expansion phase coincided exactly with the period when polybutylene pipe was being widely installed in residential construction across the Pacific Northwest. Polybutylene — a gray, flexible plastic pipe identified by the stamping PB2110 along its length — was marketed as a modern improvement over copper. It was cheaper, faster to install, and appeared to perform well in the short term. The problem revealed itself over years and decades: the chlorine and chloramine disinfectants in treated municipal water degrade the molecular structure of polybutylene from the inside out, creating micro-fractures that are invisible from the exterior of the pipe.
A polybutylene pipe that has been in service in a King City home for 35 to 40 years is profoundly degraded at the molecular level, even if it still appears intact from the outside. When failure finally occurs, it is sudden and complete — the pipe cracks at a fitting or along a weakened section and releases pressurized water into the home. There is no warning, no drip, no gradual leak. And because the degradation is systemic — every foot of poly-B pipe in the house is equally compromised — patching one failure does nothing to prevent the next one. Complete repiping with PEX is the only solution, and Sarkinen can typically complete it in a King City home within one to two days. The cost is a fraction of what emergency water damage restoration and mold remediation would run after a catastrophic poly-B failure.
Get a free pipe inspection
When repiping a King City home, the two primary material options are PEX and copper. Copper has been the gold standard for residential plumbing for decades — it resists bacterial growth, has a proven 50-plus year track record, and is familiar to every plumber and inspector. PEX is a newer material that offers significant practical advantages: it costs 30 to 40 percent less than copper in materials alone, installs faster because it can bend around corners without soldered fittings, and expands slightly under freeze pressure rather than cracking — a meaningful advantage during the Portland metro’s occasional ice storms.
For most King City homes, we recommend PEX as the repiping material. King City’s water supply from the Tigard Water District is treated with chlorine, and while modern PEX is designed to resist chlorine degradation (unlike the polybutylene it replaced), copper can slowly corrode in chlorine-treated water over very long periods. PEX also requires far fewer connections in King City’s older homes, where irregular wall cavities and tight crawl spaces make rigid copper routing more labor-intensive. Homeowners who prefer copper can choose a full copper repipe or a hybrid approach. Both materials carry manufacturer warranties of 25 years or more, and our installation workmanship is guaranteed regardless of the material chosen.
Compare repiping options
King City’s real estate market is active, with homes in the 55-and-over community and surrounding neighborhoods trading regularly. Home inspectors in the Portland metro are trained to identify galvanized steel and polybutylene pipes, and both materials are flagged in inspection reports as conditions that require attention. Galvanized pipes are noted for their limited remaining lifespan and potential water quality impact. Polybutylene triggers an even more serious warning — many buyers will not proceed with a purchase without a repiping credit or completed replacement.
For King City homeowners planning to sell, proactive repiping before listing eliminates these red flags entirely. A freshly repiped home with PEX demonstrates that the seller has invested in the property’s infrastructure, and the buyer inherits a plumbing system that will last another 50 years. In King City’s market, where buyers are often other retirees looking for move-in-ready homes with minimal maintenance concerns, a completed repipe is a compelling selling point. We provide documentation of every repipe — the permit, material specifications, and manufacturer warranty — which becomes part of the seller’s disclosure package and gives buyers confidence in the home’s plumbing condition.
Schedule pre-sale repiping
No hidden fees, no overtime charges. You get a clear, written price before any work begins. Same rate day or night.
Dual-state licensing (WA #SARKIPI946MF, OR #170052) means we serve the entire Portland-Vancouver metro.
We answer the phone day and night. A licensed plumber is dispatched immediately — at your door within 60-90 minutes.
Every repair backed by our workmanship guarantee. Background-checked, drug-tested plumbers who treat your home with care.
Check exposed pipes in your utility closet, garage, or crawl space. Galvanized pipes are steel gray in color and often show rust or mineral buildup at joints. A magnet will stick to galvanized pipe but not to copper. If your King City home was built in the 1960s, it almost certainly has galvanized supply pipes.
Most King City homes can be repiped in one to three days depending on size and layout. King City’s single-story ranch homes with accessible crawl spaces are often completed in a single day. Larger homes with more bathrooms or more complex routing may take two to three days. Water is restored each evening during multi-day projects.
Homes built in King City during the 1980s expansion may have polybutylene supply lines. Check for gray or blue-gray flexible plastic pipe in your utility closet or crawl space with the stamping PB2110. If present, repiping with PEX is strongly recommended before a failure occurs. We offer free identification inspections.
Repiping costs depend on home size, number of fixtures, material chosen, and accessibility. A typical King City home with two bathrooms costs between $4,000 and $8,000 for PEX repiping. We provide detailed estimates after an in-home assessment with clear pricing and no hidden fees.
Call now or schedule online.