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Screen Enclosure Leaning or Tilting

Pool cage leaning, tilting, or pulling away from the house. Structural issues that need immediate professional attention.

A leaning or tilting screen enclosure is a structural issue that requires immediate professional assessment. This is not a cosmetic problem — it indicates failure of the foundation, frame connections, or structural members.

Common causes

  • Footer failure — The concrete footers anchoring the enclosure have shifted, cracked, or sunk
  • Attachment failure — The connection between the enclosure and the house has loosened or pulled away
  • Wind damage — Accumulated storm damage has bent the frame out of plumb
  • Soil settlement — The ground under the pool deck has shifted, moving the footers
  • Corrosion — Severe frame corrosion has weakened structural connections

Why it’s urgent

A leaning enclosure is structurally compromised and at high risk of collapse during the next storm. It’s also a safety hazard — the weight of the aluminum frame and screen can cause injury if it falls.

What to do

  1. Do not go under the leaning section
  2. Take photos from safe distances
  3. Contact a licensed screen enclosure contractor for immediate assessment
  4. Do not attempt DIY repair on structural issues

Repair vs. rebuild

Minor lean from a single loose footer or attachment point can sometimes be corrected. Significant lean affecting multiple sections usually means partial or full rebuild. A professional assessment determines which approach is appropriate.

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