Underpinning Richmond — Foundation Repair Across a Suburb That Built Melbourne and Then Became It

Richmond has a foundation story unlike any other suburb in this series, and it starts with the ground itself. The clay and basalt deposits beneath Richmond weren’t just the soil these buildings were built on they were the raw materials that built a significant part of Victorian Melbourne. The suburb’s brickworks and bluestone quarries were operating from the 1850s, supplying the gold rush construction boom that raised the city’s earliest buildings. That industrial history left its mark on the ground: quarried sections, filled voids, disturbed soil profiles in some pockets, and variable conditions beneath what looks from the street like a consistent Victorian streetscape.
Then there’s the topography. Richmond isn’t flat. Richmond Hill the elevated western section along Punt Road was where the wealthy settled, with mansions and grand terraces looking out over the Yarra and the Dandenong Ranges. The river flats to the east and the low ground toward Collingwood to the north were workers’ territory: tight blocks, narrow cottages, tanneries and factories sitting alongside homes. Two fundamentally different foundation contexts within the same suburb boundary, and that difference still shows up in how foundations behave here today.

What Makes Richmond's Foundation Conditions Distinct

Richmond Hill vs the river flats — two different ground conditions – The elevated ground of Richmond Hill, on the western side of the suburb toward Punt Road and Church Street, sits on reactive clay — the same inner-east clay belt that runs through South Yarra and Hawthorn. Seasonal clay movement has been acting on the bluestone footings and timber subfloor construction of the Hill’s Victorian and Edwardian homes for 130 to 170 years. The cracking patterns here are driven by clay — differential seasonal shrinking and swelling, concentrated on the sides of buildings where moisture conditions vary.

The lower ground toward the Yarra River – The eastern sections of Richmond near the river sit on alluvial deposits — flatter, wetter historically, with soil conditions that reflect the river’s influence over millennia. Foundation behaviour in these sections is different from the Hill: less about reactive clay cycling and more about drainage, alluvial soil compaction, and in some areas the variable conditions left by Richmond’s industrial history.

Brickworks, quarries, and disturbed ground – Richmond’s 19th-century brickmaking and bluestone quarrying industry operated across significant sections of the suburb. Old quarry sites were eventually filled and built over, and some of that fill was done with the standards and materials of the 19th and early 20th century rather than the engineered fill of modern geotechnical practice. Properties in sections of Richmond that sit over historically quarried or filled ground can experience foundation behaviour that reflects the fill history rather than the natural soil profile. It’s one of the reasons we assess ground conditions specifically on each Richmond job rather than assuming uniformity across the suburb.

Victorian and Edwardian terrace stock — 130 to 170 years old – Richmond’s residential streets are overwhelmingly Victorian-era workers’ cottages and terraces, with Edwardian and interwar infill filling the gaps. The earliest of these buildings are now approaching 170 years old. They were built on shallow bluestone rubble footings with timber subfloor framing, on narrow blocks, sharing party walls on both sides in the terrace sections. At this age, the original footing mortar has been dealing with Melbourne’s reactive clay and seasonal moisture cycling for longer than any other generation of Melbourne’s suburbs. Cracking is common. Settlement is common. And the party wall context means that foundation movement in one building has implications for the adjoining structure.

Warehouse conversion — industrial loads replaced by residential – Richmond’s industrial heritage — the factories, warehouses, and commercial buildings concentrated in the Cremorne section and along the river precinct — has been converting to residential and mixed-use developments since the early 1990s. These buildings were designed to carry industrial floor loads, not residential ones, and their original footings reflect that. Conversion to residential or office use changes the load profile significantly, and in some cases the original footing is being asked to perform a function it was never designed for. Foundation issues in Richmond’s converted industrial stock require specific assessment that understands what the building was originally built for and what it’s now being asked to support.

Housing Commission towers in north Richmond – The Housing Commission’s slum-clearance program in north Richmond from the 1960s demolished entire blocks of workers’ cottages and replaced them with walk-up flats and tower blocks. This post-war public housing stock, now 50 to 60 years old, sits on strip footing and slab construction in the inner-east clay conditions and presents the same cumulative clay movement and progressive cracking profile seen in Housing Commission stock across Melbourne’s inner suburbs.

Signs Your Richmond Property Has Foundation Problems

  • Stepped cracking through mortar lines in Victorian brick terraces — differential footing settlement
  • Diagonal cracking from window and door corners, varying seasonally on the clay sections of the Hill
  • Cracking concentrated on one side of a terrace or cottage — often related to drainage, tree moisture, or variable soil conditions from Richmond’s industrial ground history
  • Visible movement in the shared party wall between adjoining terraces
  • Uneven floors in timber subfloor properties
  • Settlement or floor levelness issues in converted warehouse or industrial buildings
  • Progressive cracking in Housing Commission-era flat or tower stock that has been building over years
  • New cracking following renovation work or a neighbouring extension — very common in Richmond’s heavily renovated terrace stock

Foundation Repair Across Richmond's Building Types

Richmond’s Victorian and Edwardian terrace stock is the most common presenting situation — old bluestone footings on reactive clay, party walls, and in many cases multiple rounds of renovation that have changed the load the original footing is carrying. Getting the diagnosis right before any repair is scoped matters here more than in most suburbs, because the industrial ground history adds a variable that doesn’t exist in suburbs without a brickworks and quarrying past.
For warehouse and industrial conversions in Cremorne and the river precinct, the starting question is always what the original building was designed to support versus what it’s now carrying. We assess converted buildings specifically for that load history before recommending any foundation repair approach.
For the Housing Commission stock in north Richmond, the cumulative clay movement picture applies progressive cracking that won’t resolve without structural intervention and tends to worsen over time if left alone.

Our Services in Richmond

Underpinning – For Victorian terraces, Edwardian homes, and Housing Commission-era buildings experiencing foundation settlement in Richmond’s reactive clay and alluvial conditions.

Restumping & Reblocking – For Richmond’s period homes on timber subfloor construction.

Warehouse & Industrial Conversion Foundation Assessment – Specific assessment for buildings where original industrial footings are now carrying residential or commercial loads.

Pre-Renovation Foundation Assessment – Before extending or significantly altering a Richmond period home, we assess and document the existing footing condition.

Party Wall Assessment – Where terrace construction means foundation work has implications for the adjoining property.

Crack Assessment & Repair – Cause identified, addressed, and repaired properly.

Pre-Purchase Foundation Assessment – Across all of Richmond’s housing types, from Victorian cottages to converted warehouses.

Suburbs We Service Around Richmond

We service Richmond and the surrounding City of Yarra area including Cremorne, Burnley, Abbotsford, Collingwood, Fitzroy, East Melbourne, South Yarra, and Hawthorn. Get in touch if your suburb isn’t listed.

Why Richmond Property Owners Choose Harman Contracting

  • Victorian terrace and period home specialists – Genuine experience with 130 to 170-year-old bluestone footing and party wall construction.
  • Industrial ground history awareness – Understanding what Richmond’s brickworks and quarrying past means for variable ground conditions in specific pockets.
  • Warehouse conversion experience – Assessing converted industrial buildings for the load history and foundation implications of residential conversion.
  • Reactive clay and alluvial soil knowledge – Across the Hill’s clay sections and the river flat’s alluvial conditions.
  • 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 Richmond

On the elevated sections of Richmond Hill, the most likely cause is reactive clay — the inner-east clay belt that runs through Richmond shrinks in dry summers and swells in wet winters, and that seasonal cycling has been acting on your footing for 130 years or more. The cumulative displacement shows up as cracking that’s a bit wider each summer. It’s addressable but doesn’t resolve without proper intervention.
Industrial buildings were designed for very different floor loads than residential or office use. The original footings may be adequate for the new use, inadequate, or in some cases in poor condition after decades of industrial loading. An independent foundation assessment before committing to a converted property in Richmond is important — not optional. We carry out pre-purchase assessments specifically for converted industrial buildings.
In specific pockets of the suburb, yes. Properties that sit over historically quarried or filled ground can have soil conditions that behave differently from the natural profile — less predictable bearing capacity and in some cases fill settlement that has continued long after construction. It’s one of the reasons ground conditions need to be assessed on each Richmond property specifically rather than assumed to be uniform.
It’s something that has to be thought through carefully rather than ignored. Terrace party walls mean the structural condition of one property is physically connected to its neighbour’s. We assess the party wall situation as part of scoping any Richmond terrace job — underpinning carried out without considering the shared wall can create problems on the adjoining side.