Cesare's Quality Water Solutions

Pittsburgh & Southwestern PA • Custom-Engineered Water Treatment | Fully Licensed & Insured • 24/7 Emergency Service • 3rd Generation Experts

Fully Licensed & Insured 24/7 Emergency Water Service 3rd Generation Water Treatment Experts

Western Pennsylvania’s Fastest Growing County

Butler County Water Filtration

Custom-engineered water treatment for nearly 200,000 residents. From Cranberry Township to Slippery Rock, from municipal systems to private wells — clean water for the communities that keep growing.

~200K Population
789 Square Miles
57 Municipalities
★ Three Generations of Experience ◆ Custom-Engineered Systems ✓ Up to 10-Year Warranty 🏆 Award-Winning Service
About Butler County

Where Pennsylvania Keeps Growing

Created in 1800 from Allegheny County and named for Revolutionary War hero General Richard Butler, this county has always attracted pioneers. In the 1830s, Prussian immigrant John Roebling invented wire rope in the village of Saxonburg — the same innovation that would later support the Brooklyn Bridge.

Today, Butler County is Western Pennsylvania’s only consistently growing county, adding residents every year since 2020 while neighboring counties decline. The population approaches 200,000, driven by top-rated schools, safe communities, and affordable housing within easy reach of Pittsburgh.

Moraine State Park tells the county’s environmental story. Where abandoned mines and oil wells once scarred 16,725 acres, environmental engineers created Lake Arthur — now the state’s largest manmade lake. Over one million visitors annually enjoy what stands as America’s finest example of land reclamation.

From the explosive growth of Cranberry Township (ranked 9th safest small town in America) to preserved farmland and historic villages like Harmony and Zelienople, Butler County balances progress with heritage.

County Highlights

  • Moraine State Park — 16,725 acres
  • Lake Arthur — 3,225-acre glacial lake
  • Slippery Rock University
  • BC3 — #1 PA community college
  • Jennings Prairie — Only relict prairie in PA
  • Saxonburg — Wire rope birthplace
  • Harmony — Historic Harmonist village
Water Challenges

What Butler County Homeowners Experience

Glacial geology and extraction history create distinct water quality issues across the county.

Hard Water

Limestone and glacial deposits create mineral-rich groundwater throughout the county. Scale affects plumbing and appliances in both municipal and well systems.

Water Softeners →

Iron & Manganese

Orange staining on fixtures, black specks in water. The iron-rich geology that once supported mining means elevated levels in many private wells.

Iron Removal →

Sulfur Odor

Hydrogen sulfide creates the rotten egg smell common in wells near former coal and gas extraction areas. Completely treatable with proper filtration.

Sulfur Removal →

Bacteria & Coliform

Rural townships rely on private wells with no monitoring. Penn State research shows nearly half of PA wells fail bacteria standards at least once.

UV Treatment →

Low pH / Acidic Water

Blue-green stains indicate copper corrosion from acidic water. This damages plumbing and elevates copper levels in drinking water.

pH Correction →

Marcellus Shale Concerns

As the third-highest gas-producing county in Pennsylvania, some homeowners have groundwater concerns. Testing provides peace of mind.

Water Testing →
Your Water Source

Municipal System or Private Well?

Municipal Water

Butler County has multiple providers:

  • Pennsylvania American Water — City of Butler, East Butler, parts of Butler, Center, Connoquenessing Townships
  • Cranberry Township — Own system serving ~34,000 residents
  • Zelienople Borough — Municipal utility
  • Breakneck Creek Regional Authority — Mars, Adams Township areas

Common Concerns:

  • Hard water throughout most systems
  • Chlorine taste and odor
  • Aging infrastructure in older areas

Private Wells

Despite growth, large portions remain rural. Townships including Buffalo, Cherry, Clay, Clearfield, Concord, Donegal, Fairview, Forward, Mercer, Muddy Creek, Oakland, Parker, Penn, Summit, Venango, Washington, and Winfield rely heavily on private wells.

Pennsylvania does not regulate private wells. Testing and treatment are entirely your responsibility.

Common Concerns:

  • Hard water from limestone/glacial deposits
  • Iron and manganese staining
  • Hydrogen sulfide odor
  • Bacteria and coliform
  • Acidic, corrosive water
How It Works

From First Call to Clean Water

1

Consultation

Call 724-708-8816 or complete our form. We’ll discuss your concerns and schedule a visit.

2

Water Analysis

On-site testing for hardness, iron, manganese, sulfide, pH, bacteria, and other Butler County-specific parameters.

3

Custom Design

We engineer a system using Custom-Designed media matched precisely to your water chemistry.

4

Installation

Professional installation with complete walkthrough. Every system includes up to a 10-year warranty (terms apply).

Common Questions

Butler County Water FAQ

Pennsylvania American Water serves Butler city and several townships. Cranberry Township operates its own system. Zelienople has municipal water. Mars and Adams Township are served by Breakneck Creek Regional Authority. Many rural townships rely on private wells.

Butler is Western PA’s only consistently growing county — adding residents every year since 2020. Top-rated schools, safe communities (Cranberry ranks 9th safest small town nationally), affordable housing, and convenient Pittsburgh access via I-79 drive the growth.

Butler County is the third-highest Marcellus Shale gas producing county in Pennsylvania. While regulated drilling generally doesn’t impact residential water, comprehensive testing can identify any concerns and provide peace of mind.

Butler County’s geology includes limestone bedrock and glacial deposits containing calcium and magnesium. As water moves through these formations, it picks up minerals that cause hardness in both wells and municipal systems.

Hydrogen sulfide gas creates the rotten egg smell. It often occurs in areas with historical coal or gas extraction. While unpleasant and corrosive, it’s completely treatable with proper Custom-Designed media filtration.

The 16,725-acre park — including Lake Arthur — was created from land devastated by strip mining and abandoned oil wells. Over 400 wells were capped and mines sealed. Today it protects the watershed for surrounding communities.

Test annually for bacteria and nitrates at minimum. More comprehensive testing every 2-3 years is recommended, or immediately if you notice changes in taste, odor, or appearance. New homeowners should always test before moving in.

Yes. Many customers tell us their RO water tastes better than bottled. We offer high-flow systems with optional UV treatment for comprehensive drinking water protection.

Costs depend on your water source, chemistry, and issues to address. We provide detailed quotes after on-site testing — no pressure, no gimmicks. Every system includes up to a 10-year warranty (terms apply).

Absolutely. We repair and maintain all types of water treatment equipment, regardless of brand or who installed it. Call 724-708-8816 to schedule service.

Get Started

Butler County Water Consultation

What to Expect

  • Same-Day Response — We contact you within 24 hours
  • On-Site Testing — Comprehensive analysis at your property
  • Custom Quote — Detailed system design, transparent pricing

Contact Direct

Phone: 724-708-8816

Email: support@cesareswater.com

Award

Private & Secure · Same-Day Response · No Obligation

Growing With Butler County

From Moraine State Park’s environmental restoration to the innovation that built the Brooklyn Bridge, Butler County transforms challenges into opportunities. Let us help transform your water.