Professional Engineering Inspections, Inc
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Professional Engineering Inspections has been providing residential and commercial inspection and consulting services for existing and new construction in the Greater Houston area for over 28 years. Our services include prepurchase condition of property inspections, inspection of new construction, legal inspections, as well as inspections and consulting services where our clients may have specific
06/16/2026
Insulation Depth – “Almost” is NOT Good Enough
When energy code cites an insulation depth, that number should be understood as the minimum depth needed to reach the intended insulation performance. The specified depth is not a rough suggestion or a visual estimate of what “looks right.” Insulation depth is tied directly to R-value: the measure of how well insulation resists heat flow and falling short can reduce comfort, increase energy use, and leave the home performing below expectations....
Insulation Depth – “Almost” is NOT Good Enough Visit the post for more.
Great reminder. I am having trouble staying hydrated myself.
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06/01/2026
Welcome To Hurricane Season!
Today June 1st marks start of hurricane season which will continue through November 30. While we don't have any threats, yet NOAA predictions for 2026 are that activity will be below normal this season which could be good news if the prediction holds. To help you prepare Professional Engineering Inspections has put together a page of recommendations and links to keep you informed about hurricane preparedness in the Greater Houston area. ...
Welcome To Hurricane Season! Today June 1st marks start of hurricane season which will continue through November 30. While we don’t have any threats, yet NOAA predictions for 2026 are that activity will be below normal …
04/22/2026
Water issues are likely to be more of a problem as our area grows. Related is the changing topography of our area and this article discusses potential changes to the flood map as a result.
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The next most vulnerable aquifer is a tie between the Edwards and the Gulf Coast, but the Gulf Coast is different. In April 2026, the Gulf Coast Aquifer—which sits beneath Houston—is the epicenter of a geological crisis. Unlike the Ogallala, which is simply running dry, the Gulf Coast region is physically collapsing into the space where water used to be. This phenomenon is called subsidence, and as of 2026, Houston is the fastest-sinking major city in the United States.
The harm being done to the Gulf Coast Aquifer in 2026 is often described as a "slow-motion collapse." Unlike a river that can be refilled by a good rainstorm, the damage here is structural, chemical, and, in many cases, permanent. To understand how this aquifer is being harmed, we have to look at the three main ways humans and nature are "breaking" it.
Imagine the aquifer as a giant, underground layer of sand mixed with wet clay. When they pump out too much water, the weight of the cities on top (like Houston, Katy, and The Woodlands) becomes too heavy for the empty spaces to handle. The layers of clay, which were once held up by water pressure, collapse and pack tightly together. As a result, the land above actually sinks. In 2026, parts of West Houston and Katy are sinking by more than an inch every year!
Once that clay is crushed, it can never hold water again. Even if we stopped pumping today, that section of the aquifer has lost its "storage capacity" forever. It’s like squeezing a sponge so hard that it turns into a solid brick.
Because this aquifer sits right next to the Gulf of Mexico, there is a constant "tug-of-war" between the fresh water in the ground and the salt water in the ocean.
Normally, the fresh water in the aquifer is under enough pressure to push back against the ocean, keeping the salt water at the coast. But as they pump out the fresh water for homes and industry, that "push" disappears. The salt water from the Gulf is then sucked inland like a vacuum.
In coastal counties, drinking wells are becoming "brackish" (salty). Once salt water enters a freshwater well, it’s ruined for drinking and farming unless you spend millions of dollars on a desalination plant to clean it.
In 2026, the surface of the land is just as much of a problem as the pumping below. Aquifers need rain to soak through the dirt to "recharge." But in the Houston-Galveston area, thousands of square miles are covered in concrete, asphalt, and rooftops. Instead of soaking into the ground to refill the aquifer, the rain hits the pavement and immediately runs into bayous and out to the Gulf. So, we are taking more water out than ever before (to support millions of new residents), while simultaneously "paving over" the only way the aquifer has to refill itself.
The "center" of the sinking has shifted. In the 1970s, the sinking was worst in Baytown and Pasadena. Today, because of massive suburban sprawl, the "hole" has moved to the booming suburbs.
The Katy/Fulshear Corridor is currently the most vulnerable area. Some spots near Katy are sinking over 1 inch per year. The Woodlands and Spring continue to see significant rates of subsidence as thousands of new homes rely on groundwater. Jersey Village is historically one of the hardest-hit areas. This neighborhood has sunk nearly 10 feet since the 1940s, making it a permanent "bowl" that traps floodwaters during even moderate rainstorms.
To stop the sinking, the Harris-Galveston Subsidence District (HGSD) has mandated a massive shift. At the beginning of 2026, they are in the middle of a historic transition. Most water utilities in the region were required to convert at least 60% of their total water demand to "surface water" (water from lakes like Lake Houston or Lake Conroe) rather than groundwater. And the mandate moves to 80% conversion by 2035. This is why water bills in Houston have skyrocketed. Building the "Big Pipe" infrastructure to move lake water to suburbs like Katy costs billions of dollars.
The biggest danger in 2026 isn't the city disappearing under the ocean; it's that the "sinking" has changed the drainage. Because the land is no longer sloped the way nature intended, water can't flow to the Gulf. It pools in the newly formed "low spots" in the suburbs. This means that a storm that wouldn't have flooded a house in 1990 is now a "50-year flood" event for a family in 2026. As a result, the sinking in Houston is affecting insurance rates and "flood zone" maps.
04/15/2026
A Higher Level of Foundation Evaluation
In addition to our past foundation evaluation offering, Professional Engineering Inspections is offering a higher level of foundation evaluation that includes elevations and deflection criteria. We have been offering the option of a higher level of foundation evaluation for a while now; although, we have not really advertised it. In the past our foundation inspections were completed using a spirit level as the measurement tool when evaluating the levelness of the structure supported by the foundation we were inspecting. ...
A Higher Level of Foundation Evaluation In addition to our past foundation evaluation offering, Professional Engineering Inspections is offering a higher level of foundation evaluation that includes elevations and deflection criteria. W…
03/03/2026
The uncertainty created by the tariff ruling appears to be affecting construction prices.
What the Supreme Court’s Tariff Decision Means for Construction Costs This article serves as a breakdown on the potential effects of the Supreme Court’s recent decision to strike down President Trump’s blanket tariffs as
03/03/2026
Thought this was an interesting article. This is also a good blog to get plugged into.
Homebuilder Sentiment Rises: What It Means for Texas Construction Businesses As 2025 draws to a close, signs of cautious optimism are emerging in the U.S. housing market. According to the National Association of Home Builders
03/03/2026
Obituary for Donald M. Robinson – My Dad
Donald M. Robinson was my dad, and he passed on February 13, 2026. In the summer of 1987, my dad gave me a job. I had just enrolled in the University of Houston Engineering and would need work to pay for my education. He was a tough boss with high standards and the expectation I would meet them. We had some hard conversations that first year in school. ...
Obituary for Donald M. Robinson – My Dad Donald M. Robinson was my dad, and he passed on February 13, 2026. In the summer of 1987, my dad gave me a job. I had just enrolled in the University of Houston Engineering and would need work to …
01/31/2026
Recent update in the DOE furnace ban.
ACCA Fights DOE Ban on Non-Condensing Furnaces The Air Conditioning Contractors of America (ACCA) is fighting new Department of Energy (DOE) requirements on the efficiency of furnaces which will effectively eliminate non-condensing furnaces use…
01/24/2026
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You may have seen warnings about “exploding trees” with the upcoming freezing weather.
Trees don’t actually explode, but freezing conditions can cause frost cracks. When temperatures drop suddenly, water inside the tree expands and contracts faster than the bark can handle, causing the outer layer to split. These frost cracks, along with branches breaking under the weight of ice, can create loud popping or cracking sounds that sometimes get described as “explosions.”
For your safety, keep a good distance from trees with heavy ice buildup or visible damage. Wait for conditions to improve before approaching or assessing any broken branches.
👉 More about winter tree care: https://tfsweb.tamu.edu/trees/tree-care/trees-and-natural-disasters/
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| Monday | 8am - 5pm |
| Tuesday | 8am - 5pm |
| Wednesday | 8am - 5pm |
| Thursday | 8am - 5pm |
| Friday | 8am - 5pm |