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The cheapest radon system you'll ever own is the one designed into the house before the slab is poured. For builders and buyers in Siouxland's new developments, here's how rough-ins work — and what to do when a "radon-ready" home still tests high.
A common assumption in new developments — Dakota Dunes, Sergeant Bluff, the newer plats on Sioux City's north and west sides — is that a new house means a radon-safe house. The soil doesn't care about the build date. New homes sit on the same uranium-bearing glacial soils as century-old ones, and modern construction can actually concentrate radon: tighter envelopes hold soil gas in, and high-efficiency HVAC can increase the stack effect that draws it up. In Zone 1 counties, new builds routinely test above 4.0 pCi/L. Every new home should be tested after occupancy — no exceptions for age.
RRNC — sometimes called a "passive system" or "radon rough-in" — is a set of inexpensive steps taken during construction that make radon control nearly free later:
Done during the build, all of this typically adds a few hundred dollars in materials and labor — a fraction of a retrofit — and the vent stack hides inside walls instead of running up your siding.
A passive stack reduces radon, but in the soils around here it often isn't enough by itself. The fix is the whole point of the rough-in: activation. An inline radon fan is mounted on the existing stack in the attic, wired to the waiting junction box, and the passive system becomes a full active sub-slab depressurization system — usually in a single short visit, with no coring, no new pipe runs, and no visible change to the house.
If you're building in Woodbury, Plymouth, or Union County, offering RRNC as standard is an easy differentiator in a market where buyers increasingly ask about radon at showing time — and where the inspection-period radon test has become routine. We work with builders on:
The same thinking applies when you change an existing house. Pouring a slab for an addition? A collection point and stub under the new concrete costs almost nothing while the ground is open. Finishing your basement into living space? Test first — mitigation is cleaner and cheaper before drywall and flooring go in, and a bedroom or family room at the lowest level raises the stakes on whatever number the house runs at. We regularly coordinate directly with remodel contractors so the radon work slots into their schedule instead of disrupting it.
New construction is the one moment radon control is nearly free. If you're building: rough it in. If you've bought new: test it, and activate the stack if the number's high. If you're adding on or finishing a basement: deal with it while the ground is open. Every one of those conversations starts the same way — send us the details or call (712) 526-4497 and we'll tell you what the house actually needs, and what it doesn't.
Tell us about your home and we'll get back to you fast — or skip the form and call (712) 526-4497.