Stahnsdorf lies southwest of Berlin in the Potsdam-Mittelmark district. To the north, the Teltow Canal forms the boundary with Kleinmachnow and Berlin-Zehlendorf; to the south, the Nuthe-Nieplitz lowlands extend. The municipality consists of the districts Stahnsdorf, Güterfelde, Sputendorf and Kienwerder. Stahnsdorf is part of the Berlin commuter belt: many residents commute to Berlin but choose to live in green surroundings on generous plots with old tree stock.
The building stock in Stahnsdorf is split in two. In the historic centre stand settlement houses and detached houses from the 1930s to 1960s with main drain lines made of clay pipe and socket joints. The plots are large, often with old tree stock – pines, oaks, birches – which drive their roots into leaking pipe joints. In Güterfelde, on the other hand, numerous newbuilds have emerged since the 1990s: modern detached houses with plastic pipes, but on what was once agricultural land with a shallow water table. The main drain lines in Stahnsdorf are often 20 to 40 metres long – from the house to the sewer connection at the street. The combination of old clay pipes, dense tree stock, long pipe runs and a shallow water table makes the municipality technically demanding.
Whether a blocked drain in a settlement house by the Südwestfriedhof cemetery, root ingress in the main drain line of a period building in Sputendorf or backflow in a newbuild basement in Güterfelde – we are your contact in Stahnsdorf. Active since 2015, with professional equipment and a fixed price. Call-out fee 49 euros including on-site diagnosis, available 24 hours.