Warren is the largest city in Macomb County and one of our most-inspected markets. Most of the housing was built in the post-WWII boom between 1948 and 1970 to house the workforce of the auto plants — solid, modest construction that's now reaching the point where original systems are at or past service life. We inspect Warren multiple times a week and know exactly what to look for.
Warren's housing stock is dominated by 1948–1970 post-war ranch, bungalow, and small-Cape construction. These homes were built quickly and durably to house GM, Chrysler, and supplier-plant workers, and their construction era means we routinely find original cast-iron drain stacks, original galvanized or partial-copper supply piping, original 60-amp or partially-upgraded 100-amp electrical service, fuse panels that were partially upgraded to breakers, and original boiler-and-radiator heat systems converted to forced-air with mixed quality. We document each system's actual condition rather than its label.
Warren also has a smaller inventory of newer construction (1980s–2000s subdivisions on the city's northern and western edges) and a mix of light commercial-residential properties. The newer-construction inspections shift focus to builder-quality issues — insulation, flashing, HVAC sizing, and grading — while the post-war core inspections focus on documenting end-of-life systems so buyers can budget for replacements rather than be surprised by them.
Warren is 25–35 minutes from our Farmington Hills office and one of our highest-volume cities. We can typically schedule within 24 hours of booking, including Saturday morning slots.
Yes — these are core service-area properties. We know the era well, the typical construction quality, and the recurring issues that show up after 60+ years on the original systems.
Inspection pricing scales with square footage and complexity. Warren's predominantly modest post-war housing typically falls at the lower end of our pricing — call or use the calculator for your specific property.