Structural wood and floor repair in Muscatine, Quad Cities by Behncke Construction

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Structural Wood Repair · Muscatine, IA

Sagging Floor & Wood Repair in Muscatine

Sagging, sloping, or bouncy floors in Muscatine usually mean a failed joist, beam, or support below. We find the real cause and fix it for good.

Why It Sags

Why Muscatine Floors Sag — and How We Fix Them

A sloping or bouncy floor is structural: a rotted joist, an undersized beam, a failed sill plate, or a settled support post. Muscatine’s historic stone foundations and bluff-side drainage often play a role. We diagnose what actually failed and repair the structure so the floor stays level for good.

What We Do

What We Repair Below the Floor

Floor Joist Repair & Sistering

Reinforcing or “sistering” cracked, sagging, or undersized joists, and replacing those that are too far gone.

Beam & Girder Replacement

Replacing failing main beams and girders, and adding properly sized support where the original was undersized.

Sill Plate & Rot Repair

Cutting out water-damaged sill plates and rotted framing and rebuilding with treated, properly flashed material.

Support Posts & Jacks

Adding or replacing support posts and adjustable columns on proper footings to carry the load and re-level the floor.

Root Cause

Often It Starts With Water

Our Philosophy

A surprising amount of structural wood damage traces back to moisture — a wet crawl space, poor drainage, or a foundation leak quietly rotting the wood above it. We look for that root cause so the new framing doesn’t end up failing the same way. Sometimes the real fix is drainage or waterproofing →

— Behncke Construction · since 1948

Floors sloping or bouncing?

We’ll get under the floor, find what’s actually failing, and recommend the repair that fixes it for good — with a written estimate, usually within one business day.

The mistake we get called to fix

New wood over an unsolved problem — or floors leveled too fast

The callbacks we’re asked to fix are usually new wood installed over an unsolved moisture problem, or floors jacked up too fast — which cracks drywall and racks doors. Structural wood has to be corrected gradually and at the source. Done right once beats done fast twice.

— The Behncke crew

Your next step

“How do I avoid a repair that fails again?”

Know what separates lasting work from a callback:

  1. Wood & floor repair — why we correct floors gradually
  2. Get an inspection — a plan that fixes the cause, not the symptom

Real customers · real reviews

What Quad Cities homeowners say

★★★★★5.049 Google reviews
★★★★★
“We had our basement joists replaced. Reasonable quote, booked in a timely manner, great communication with expectations and the contract. We could park a semi on our new floors. The owner was a doll.”
Anna MartinezGoogle review
★★★★★
“Kyle came out and did a very thorough job of looking for possible cracks in the foundation, digging down to see below surface line — and informed us he didn’t see any obvious cracks.”
S. F.Google review
Read all 49 reviews on Google →