Municipal Water Mains · BC Region
Water main leak detection across the Okanagan.
A patchwork of municipal systems and improvement districts drawing on the valley's lakes and upland sources, with strong summer peaks, irrigation legacies, and dry silty soils through which leak water can vanish downward without ever surfacing. Leak.ca crews have worked BC water systems since 1999 — acoustic surveys, logger programs, zone analysis, break location, and full NRW campaigns, with aerial thermal screening when network scale calls for it.
When the surface shows nothing, acoustics and night-flow analysis do the finding — and recovered leakage is deferred capacity in a valley where summer demand keeps climbing.
Free phone consult · No pressure · Mon–Sat 8am–6pm PT
Okanagan communities we serve
Every community carries dedicated service pages with local ground-condition context:
Kelowna
Dry silts and sands give the deepest, cleanest GPR returns in BC — 3–4 m is routine. Irrigation saturation creates local wet anomalies that are themselves diagnostic of leaks.
Acoustic survey·Break location·NRW program·All Kelowna services
West Kelowna
Bench sands scan deep; steep gravel fans add scatter. Wildfire-rebuilt neighbourhoods carry brand-new services beside legacy lines — both worth mapping.
Acoustic survey·Break location·NRW program·All West Kelowna services
Lake Country
Excellent dry-ground penetration on the terraces; orchard irrigation mains and aging galvanized services dominate the buried inventory.
Acoustic survey·Break location·NRW program·All Lake Country services
Vernon
Dry-season scans reach deep; spring saturation on the lower benches briefly shortens range. Agricultural and residential irrigation crisscross most parcels.
Acoustic survey·Break location·NRW program·All Vernon services
Penticton
The sand benches between Okanagan and Skaha lakes return 4 m+ penetration on a good day; almost nothing hides here from a properly run survey.
Acoustic survey·Break location·NRW program·All Penticton services
The municipal service set
Network surveys
Acoustic Water Main Leak Survey
Systematic acoustic survey of municipal distribution networks — correlators, ground microphones, and listening points worked block by block until every leak on the route list has a paint mark and a record. The backbone method of every serious water loss program since long before anything flew.
View serviceContinuous listening
Leak Noise Logger Programs
Noise loggers deployed across the network — magnetically mounted in valve chambers and on hydrants, listening through the quiet hours night after night. Lift-and-shift campaigns or permanent coverage, with every point of interest ranked before a crew ever mobilises to correlate.
View serviceZone metering
District Metered Area (DMA) Leak Detection
Carve the network into measurable zones and the leaks have nowhere to hide. DMA support from boundary design and minimum night flow analysis through to the acoustic work that converts a high-MNF zone into pinpointed repairs.
View serviceNarrowing the search
Step Testing & Zone Isolation
Close valves in a planned sequence, watch the zone meter, and the leak tells you which segment it lives in. Step testing is the old, unglamorous, devastatingly effective way to shrink a leaky zone to a few hundred metres of main — before acoustic crews finish the job.
View serviceLarge diameter
Trunk & Transmission Main Leak Detection
The big pipes play by different rules: low-frequency leak noise, long runs between contact points, and failure consequences nobody wants to meet. Specialist acoustic methods for transmission and trunk mains — found early, while the fix is still a scheduled repair instead of a crater.
View serviceAppurtenances
Hydrant & Valve Leak Survey
The fittings leak too — and they lie. Passing gate valves mimic main leaks, hydrant drain weeps run for years uncounted, and chamber floods get blamed on groundwater. A systematic appurtenance survey cleans up both the losses and the false signals confusing every other method.
View serviceActive breaks
Water Main Break Location
Water is up through the pavement on 4th Avenue — but the break is rarely under the puddle. Precise location of active main breaks before the excavator arrives: one hole, the right hole, with the road closed for hours instead of days.
View serviceThe full campaign
Non-Revenue Water (NRW) Program
Treated water that earns nothing — leaked, unmeasured, or unbilled — commonly runs 10–30% of production. The NRW program is the umbrella: water balance to size the problem, zone data to rank it, every detection method in this hub to locate it, and re-measurement to prove what came back.
View serviceOkanagan questions, answered
What makes Okanagan water systems distinctive for leak detection?
A patchwork of municipal systems and improvement districts drawing on the valley's lakes and upland sources, with strong summer peaks, irrigation legacies, and dry silty soils through which leak water can vanish downward without ever surfacing. Survey design here starts from those realities — methods, sensor spacing, and timing matched to the region rather than copied from somewhere flatter.
Which Okanagan communities do you serve?
Dedicated local coverage for Kelowna, West Kelowna, Lake Country, Vernon, Penticton — and the surrounding systems between them. Every community page carries its own ground-condition and water-system context; province-wide pricing applies with no regional premium.
Why run a leak program in Okanagan now?
When the surface shows nothing, acoustics and night-flow analysis do the finding — and recovered leakage is deferred capacity in a valley where summer demand keeps climbing. Distribution systems commonly lose 10–30% of treated water to leakage — the free phone consult (604-239-9934) scopes what a ranked program would look like for your network in one conversation.
Other BC regions
← Municipal water main hub·Complete guide·Government programs
Talk to us about your Okanagan system
Network size, pipe stock, loss picture — and what a ranked program would look like, in one call.