Underpinning Murrumbeena — Foundation Specialists for a Suburb Built Around Its Railway

Murrumbeena’s railway station opened in 1877, and the suburb grew steadily around it from that point first with market gardens and dairy farms, then with the California bungalows and period homes that fill its streets today. The bulk of that residential development happened through the 1920s and 1930s, with the Beauville Estate adding a significant pocket of homes in the Depression era. Walk through Murrumbeena now and you’re looking at housing stock that’s mostly 80 to 100 years old solidly built, well-regarded, and increasingly showing the foundation issues that come with that age.
At Harman Contracting, we work regularly through Murrumbeena and its neighbours. The foundation profile here is largely consistent: interwar homes on timber subfloor construction, sitting on the sandy, free-draining soil that runs through this part of Melbourne’s south-east. That combination has a well-understood set of things that go wrong, and we know what to look for.

Murrumbeena's Foundation Conditions

Interwar housing stock on timber subfloor construction – The California bungalows, Edwardian homes, and Depression-era estates that define Murrumbeena’s streetscape were almost all built on timber subfloor systems — floor frames carried on timber stumps sitting on pad footings. At 80 to 100 years old, those subfloor systems are at or past the point where deterioration is a common finding. Uneven floors, sticking doors, and gaps along skirting boards are the usual early signs, and they’re frequent presentations in Murrumbeena’s older housing stock.

Sandy south-east soil — free-draining but with its own vulnerabilities – Murrumbeena sits on the same historically sandy, free-draining soil that runs through this part of Melbourne’s south-east — the legacy of the market garden belt that once characterised the area. This soil profile doesn’t have the dramatic seasonal swelling of Melbourne’s reactive clay suburbs, but it has its own vulnerabilities around drainage, erosion, and the reliability of conventional excavated foundation methods. It’s one reason screw piling is often our preferred approach here over traditional bored piers.

Significant development pressure around the station precinct – Murrumbeena was designated a State Government Activity Centre in 2025, with major high-density development being fast-tracked around the station. Combined with the ongoing knock-down rebuild activity happening throughout the suburb, established property owners are increasingly adjacent to construction activity, with the foundation implications that brings. If significant development is happening near your Murrumbeena property, getting the existing foundation condition documented beforehand is a sensible precaution.

The elevated rail rebuild and rail corridor properties – The level crossing removal and station reconstruction along the Murrumbeena rail corridor involved significant construction works. Properties near the corridor that experienced cracking or movement during or after that construction period are worth having properly assessed if they haven’t been already.

Signs Your Murrumbeena Home Has Foundation Problems

  • Floors that have become noticeably uneven or springy in a timber subfloor home.
  • Doors and windows sticking or sitting visibly out of square.
  • Diagonal cracking from the corners of windows and doors.
  • Gaps forming along skirting boards or between walls and ceilings.
  • Cracking that appeared or worsened during nearby construction or the rail corridor works.
  • Visible stump deterioration — splitting, softening, or uneven heights — on subfloor inspection.

Foundation Repair for Murrumbeena's Period Homes

The interwar bungalow is a strong, well-built structure above ground. What needs attention at this age is the subfloor system underneath it. In most Murrumbeena cases that means restumping — replacing deteriorated timber stumps and relevelling the floor frame — and in some cases underpinning the perimeter footing where more significant settlement has occurred alongside the subfloor movement.
We carry out a proper subfloor inspection on every Murrumbeena job before scoping any work, because the full extent of deterioration isn’t visible without physically getting under the building. What looks like a straightforward restumping job sometimes involves perimeter footing work as well, and vice versa.

Our Services in Murrumbeena

  • Underpinning – For perimeter footing settlement in period and post-war homes.
  • Reblocking & Restumping – The core service for Murrumbeena’s interwar timber subfloor stock. We replace deteriorated stumps and relevel affected floors.
  • Screw Piling – Preferred over conventional bored piers in Murrumbeena’s sandy soil conditions.
  • Pre-Purchase Foundation Assessment – A proper foundation inspection before you commit to buying an older Murrumbeena property.
  • Pre-Construction Documentation – Foundation condition recorded before neighbouring development or construction begins.
  • Crack Assessment & Repair – Identifying whether cracking is cosmetic or structural, and repairing once the cause is addressed.

Suburbs We Service Around Murrumbeena

We work regularly across Murrumbeena and the surrounding City of Glen Eira area including Carnegie, Bentleigh East, Hughesdale, McKinnon, Ormond, Caulfield South, and Oakleigh. If your suburb isn’t listed, get in touch.

Why Murrumbeena Homeowners Choose Harman Contracting

  • Period home and timber subfloor specialists – Experience with Murrumbeena’s interwar housing stock.
  • Sandy soil knowledge – Understanding when screw piling outperforms conventional methods.
  • Development-context awareness – Experienced in assessing and documenting foundations in the context of neighbouring construction.
  • 45+ years of combined experience – Across every type of Melbourne foundation problem.
  • Engineering certified – Every significant repair properly documented.
  • Fully insured – Registered builders with full public liability cover.
  • Free on-site quotes – A proper, specific assessment before any commitment.

Underpinning Murrumbeena

In a home on timber subfloor construction — which describes most of Murrumbeena’s interwar stock — uneven floors almost always point to stump deterioration. At 80 to 100 years old, it’s an extremely common finding. A subfloor inspection confirms the extent and what restumping is needed.
Largely yes. Murrumbeena shares the same historically sandy, free-draining soil profile that runs through this part of Melbourne’s south-east. That means similar foundation considerations apply — including a preference for screw piling over conventional bored piers in genuinely sandy conditions.
It can. Demolition, excavation, and construction on nearby blocks can change drainage patterns and ground conditions around an established neighbouring property. Getting your foundation documented before works begin gives you a clear baseline if new cracking appears once construction gets underway.
Call us to arrange a free on-site inspection. We’ll assess your Murrumbeena property’s foundation condition and give you a clear, honest quote.