Underpinning Mulgrave — Foundation Repair for a Suburb That Grew Up Later Than Its Neighbours

Mulgrave tells a different story from the suburbs that surround it. While Bentleigh East was filling with cream brick veneer through the 1950s, and Hughesdale was built out around its railway station through the 1930s and 40s, Mulgrave was still largely farmland dairy properties, orchards along High Street Road, and a rural community that persisted well into the postwar years. The suburb had no train station and no tram. What eventually drove its residential transformation wasn’t rail access but freeway access the Monash Freeway opening up the south-east corridor and making Mulgrave a viable destination for families wanting space, larger blocks, and a newer home.
The result is a suburb whose dominant housing stock was built a full decade or two later than most of its neighbours overwhelmingly 1960s and 1970s brick veneer on concrete slab, on generous blocks that reflected the greenfields development of the time. Those homes are now 50 to 60 years old, and the foundation problems that come with that age in Mulgrave’s specific soil conditions are something we see regularly at Harman Contracting. The picture here is different from what we deal with in older suburbs different construction methods, different soil behaviour, and a different set of things that go wrong.

What Makes Mulgrave's Foundation Conditions Distinct

A 1960s–70s building era, not 1930s–50s – Most foundation repair work across Melbourne’s south-eastern suburbs is aimed at interwar bungalows and early post-war homes on timber subfloor construction. Mulgrave is the exception. Because the suburb didn’t develop its residential character until the 1960s and into the 1970s — triggered by freeway access rather than rail — the overwhelming majority of its original housing stock was built on concrete slab or strip footing construction, not timber stumps. That means the presenting foundation problems in Mulgrave are predominantly slab movement, strip footing settlement, and concrete-era construction issues rather than stump deterioration and subfloor failure. It’s a different job, and it requires a different diagnosis.

Clay soil with significant moisture variability – Mulgrave sits in a soil zone characterised as sedimentary-derived clay loam — not the extreme reactive clay of Melbourne’s inner north or western suburbs, but a soil profile with meaningful clay content that responds to seasonal moisture change. Wet winters bring swelling, while dry summers bring shrinkage. Over 50 to 60 years of that cycle acting on slab and strip footing construction, differential movement becomes a common finding — one part of a slab that has tracked moisture change differently from another, cracking the structure above in patterns that look alarming but are often addressable once properly diagnosed.

Mature trees on large blocks — a significant moisture driver – Because Mulgrave was developed on what was previously farming and orchard land, its blocks are generous by Melbourne standards, and 50 to 60 years of establishment has produced suburb-wide tree cover of significant maturity. Mature trees within 10 metres of a footing draw substantial moisture from the surrounding soil through summer, drying out the clay on the tree side of a building while the opposite side retains more moisture. That differential moisture state — one side of a slab drying faster than the other — is one of the most common causes of the cracking patterns we see in Mulgrave homes. Managing the tree relationship is part of properly addressing the foundation problem, not just an afterthought.

Dandenong Creek corridor and variable drainage – Mulgrave’s eastern boundary runs along the Dandenong Creek corridor, including Jells Park and the associated wetlands and drainage infrastructure. Properties in the lower-lying sections of the suburb near the creek are in a drainage catchment that has historically had wetter ground conditions than the higher sections further west. Soil that sits wetter for longer behaves differently under a foundation than well-draining ground, and the variable behaviour across Mulgrave’s topography is one reason we assess ground conditions on each property rather than applying a single assumption across the suburb.

Active knock-down rebuilds and townhouse development – Like many of Melbourne’s south-eastern suburbs, Mulgrave is experiencing a sustained wave of older homes being knocked down and replaced with townhouses or new single dwellings. This creates the standard context that neighbouring established properties need to be aware of — changed drainage patterns, excavation vibration, and altered ground conditions around the footprint of a new, larger development next door. If you have a 1960s or 70s home in Mulgrave and development is happening on an adjacent block, having your own foundation condition documented beforehand is a practical precaution.

The Waverley Park estate — a distinct development pocket – One of Mulgrave’s notable features is the Waverley Park residential estate, built on the car park and surrounding land of the former AFL ground. Around 1,400 dwellings were developed on this site from the early 2000s, creating a distinct pocket of newer residential construction within the suburb. Foundation issues in this estate have a different profile from the suburb’s older 1960s–70s housing stock — newer construction on engineered fill rather than natural ground, with its own specific considerations for homeowners experiencing movement or cracking.

Signs Your Mulgrave Home Has Foundation Problems

  • Cracking in internal wall plasterwork, particularly diagonal cracking running from the corners of windows and doors — the standard pattern of differential slab movement.
  • Stepped cracking in external brickwork following the mortar lines, often on one side of the building more than another.
  • Doors and windows that have started sticking or binding, or that have visibly shifted out of square.
  • Cracking that worsens noticeably after a dry summer and partially closes in a wet winter — the seasonal signature of clay movement under a slab.
  • Cracking concentrated on the side of the house closest to a large tree — a specific and common pattern in Mulgrave given its established tree stock.
  • Slab cracking visible in the floor in tiled or hard-surfaced areas.
  • New cracking following demolition or construction on a neighbouring block.
  • Cracking in homes within the Waverley Park estate, particularly where fill compaction or drainage may be a factor.

Foundation Repair for Mulgrave's Brick Veneer Slab Homes

The 1960s and 70s brick veneer home on a concrete slab is a different repair proposition from an interwar bungalow on timber stumps, and it’s worth understanding why. The slab is a rigid structure when the ground beneath it moves unevenly, the slab resists and then cracks, often transmitting that cracking visibly up through the brick veneer walls above. What looks like a wall problem is almost always a ground problem underneath.
In Mulgrave’s clay loam conditions, that ground movement is typically driven by moisture either seasonal clay expansion and contraction, tree-related soil drying, drainage issues concentrating water against one section of the footing, or some combination of all three. Correctly diagnosing which factor is dominant on a specific property matters, because the repair approach and the long-term management of the problem are different depending on what’s actually driving it. We don’t begin any underpinning or footing repair in Mulgrave without first understanding what the ground is doing and why.

Tree Management and Foundation Repair — A Mulgrave-Specific Issue

In a suburb with Mulgrave’s level of established tree cover on large blocks, the relationship between mature trees and concrete slab foundations is worth understanding clearly, because we see it driving foundation problems here more frequently than in many other suburbs.
When a large tree draws moisture from the clay soil within its root zone which can extend well beyond the canopy it dries out the soil on that side of the building. The slab, designed for relatively uniform ground support, ends up with one section sitting on drier, denser soil and another on moister soil. Over time, the differential settlement this creates shows up as cracking that follows a characteristic pattern: concentrated on the side of the building closest to the tree, often diagonal from window and door corners, and varying with the seasons.
The structural fix and the tree situation need to be considered together. Underpinning or footing work done without addressing the ongoing moisture differential will be addressing the symptom rather than the cause. We factor the tree context explicitly into how we approach Mulgrave foundation assessments.

Our Services in Mulgrave

Underpinning – For Mulgrave’s 1960s–70s brick veneer homes and slab constructions experiencing foundation settlement, we install new footings appropriate to the specific ground conditions and movement pattern found on each property.

Screw Piling – Where soil conditions in Mulgrave call for deeper load transfer below the active clay zone, screw piling is a frequently preferred method over conventional excavated piers.

Reblocking & Restumping – For the smaller proportion of Mulgrave properties on timber subfloor construction, we replace deteriorated stumps and relevel floors.

Pre-Purchase Foundation Assessment – Mulgrave’s older 1960s–70s homes warrant a proper foundation assessment before purchase. We give buyers a clear, honest picture of what they’re committing to before contracts are exchanged.

Pre-Construction Foundation Condition Documentation – For established property owners adjacent to planned demolition or development, we document your foundation’s condition before neighbouring works begin.

Crack Assessment & Repair – We identify whether cracking is cosmetic or structural, what’s driving it at ground level, and carry out repairs once the underlying cause is properly understood and addressed.

Foundation Repair Connected to Drainage Issues – Where slab movement is connected to drainage problems — blocked or broken stormwater infrastructure, or drainage concentrated against a footing — we address the structural repair alongside the drainage cause.

Suburbs We Service Around Mulgrave

Mulgrave sits within the City of Monash, and we work regularly across the surrounding area including:
Mulgrave, Wheelers Hill, Glen Waverley, Notting Hill, Springvale, Oakleigh South, Oakleigh, Clayton, Clayton South, and the broader City of Monash and City of Kingston areas.
If your suburb isn’t listed, get in touch — we cover a wide stretch of Melbourne’s south-east and the chances are good we service your location.

Why Mulgrave Homeowners Choose Harman Contracting

  • Slab and concrete-era specialists – Genuine experience with the 1960s–70s brick veneer on slab construction that defines Mulgrave’s housing stock, not just older timber subfloor homes.
  • Clay soil and moisture management – Understanding how Mulgrave’s soil conditions behave seasonally and what that means for diagnosis and long-term repair.
  • Tree-context awareness – Factoring the mature tree situation explicitly into foundation assessments in a suburb where it’s a leading driver of movement.
  • Drainage expertise – Addressing foundation problems connected to drainage causes alongside the structural repair.
  • 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 of your Mulgrave property before any commitment.

Underpinning Mulgrave

Cracking in a 1970s brick veneer home on a concrete slab is worth taking seriously but isn’t automatically a sign of catastrophic failure. The most common cause in Mulgrave is differential movement in the clay soil beneath the slab — one part of the foundation tracking seasonal moisture change differently from another. The pattern and location of the cracking tells you a lot: diagonal cracks from window and door corners, or stepped cracking in external brickwork concentrated on one side of the building, are foundation-related. Hairline cracking in plasterwork that doesn’t follow those patterns is often cosmetic. A proper inspection will tell you which category your situation falls into.
Almost certainly, yes. In Mulgrave’s clay loam soil conditions, mature trees within 10 metres of a footing dry out the surrounding soil as they draw moisture through summer. That differential drying — the soil on the tree side contracting while the rest of the slab sits on moister ground — is one of the most common causes of cracking in Mulgrave homes. The structural repair and the tree situation need to be thought about together.
Potentially. Lower-lying sections of the suburb near the Dandenong Creek corridor have historically wetter ground conditions than higher parts of Mulgrave. Soil that retains more moisture behaves differently under a foundation, and drainage from the catchment can concentrate in ways that affect specific properties. It’s one of the reasons we assess ground conditions on each site rather than assuming what the soil is doing based on the suburb address alone.
Yes, in some respects. The Waverley Park estate was built from the early 2000s on what was previously car park and developed land rather than natural ground. Construction on engineered fill has its own specific foundation considerations — fill that wasn’t compacted uniformly, drainage that differs from the surrounding natural ground, and a different structural history from the suburb’s older 1960s–70s housing stock. If you’re in the estate and experiencing cracking or movement, it’s worth getting an assessment that’s specific to the fill and drainage context of that development rather than assuming the same drivers apply as in the older part of the suburb.
It’s worth being aware of. Demolition and construction on an adjacent block can change surface drainage patterns, introduce vibration from heavy machinery, and in some cases alter groundwater behaviour around an established neighbouring property. Getting your foundation condition documented before the works begin gives you a clear baseline — useful for identifying any pre-existing issues and for having documented evidence if new cracking appears once construction is underway.
Call us to arrange a free on-site inspection. We’ll assess your Mulgrave property’s specific foundation condition — whether it’s a 1960s slab home, a newer Waverley Park dwelling, or anything in between — and give you a clear, honest picture of what’s happening and what it will take to fix it.