Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Thompsonville
Chimney liner installation and chimney rebuilds in Thompsonville, CT typically cost between $1,800 and $6,500 depending on whether you’re relining a single flue or rebuilding a shared multi-unit stack, and Anthony Perez personally leads every job from inspection to completion. We’re on Thompsonville roads daily — from Pearl Street to the multi-family blocks off High Street — and we carry the DuraFlex and HeatShield inventory needed to avoid supply delays on liner jobs. If you’re smelling smoke in an upstairs unit, seeing mortar dust in your firebox, or your home inspector flagged an unlined flue in a 1920s triple-decker, call us at (833) 719-7193. We’ll inspect it this week and give you a written estimate you can actually use.

Thompsonville’s housing stock is unlike anywhere else in Hartford County. This former mill village built around the Bigelow carpet manufacturing complex is dominated by late-19th to early-20th century worker tenements and multi-family cottages whose masonry chimneys were originally designed for coal combustion and later converted to oil heat — often without proper relining. This concentration of century-old, coal-era multi-flue stacks with deteriorated or absent clay tile liners makes inadequate relining and mortar joint failure the defining chimney hazard here in a way that simply does not apply to the newer subdivisions elsewhere in Enfield. We’ve rebuilt and relined more chimneys in the 06083 zip than any other single trade operation, and we know the specific failure patterns these buildings hide.
Why Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut Is Thompsonville’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
Eight years, one specialty. That’s the difference. Anthony Perez doesn’t dispatch crews — he arrives with the tools, runs the camera, and makes the call on whether your stack needs a liner, a partial rebuild, or full demolition and reconstruction. Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team has completed hundreds of liner installations and rebuilds across northern Hartford County, and the pattern recognition matters: a technician who has only seen suburban single-family chimneys will miss what a Thompsonville triple-decker stack is actually doing.
800+ homeowners have reviewed us at a 4.7-star average. The volume matters because it reflects real jobs finished, not a curated handful. Thompsonville landlords and owner-occupants specifically mention our willingness to explain shared-stack configurations, coordinate access with multiple tenants, and document everything for insurance or permitting purposes.
We keep DuraFlex stainless steel liners, HeatShield cerfractory mix, and Gelco caps in stock specifically to avoid the two-week delays that kill rental schedules. Most Thompsonville inspections happen within 48 hours of your call; liner installations and partial rebuilds typically start within a week once you approve the scope.
Our familiarity with the Connecticut River valley climate is practical, not theoretical. Sustained sub-freezing temperatures from December through February drive heavy heating-season chimney use, accelerating creosote layering in wood-burning flues and amplifying freeze-thaw spalling in the soft, older brick common to mill-era construction. Valley moisture from the nearby Scantic and Connecticut Rivers compounds the deterioration of mortar in chimneys that may not have been repointed in decades. We account for this in every rebuild specification.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Thompsonville
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
For most Thompsonville oil-to-gas or oil-to-wood conversions, a DuraFlex stainless steel liner is the correct specification. These smooth-wall, 316Ti alloy liners resist the corrosive condensate that killed the original clay liners in mill-era chimneys. We size them precisely — critical in Thompsonville, where installing a single 8-inch flue liner in a stack originally carrying two separate coal flues leads to poor draft and dangerous creosote buildup. On a Benson Place triple-decker, our crew found a shared stack serving two units: the upper flue had a cracked clay liner from decades of oil-heat condensate, while the lower flue was completely unlined. We installed a DuraFlex stainless steel liner in the upper flue and ground-lanced the lower flue for a HeatShield ceramic liner restore, restoring safe operation for both tenants.
Flexible Liner for Offset Flues
Some Thompsonville chimneys — especially the narrower cottage stacks on Elm Street and the side streets off Pearl — have offsets or bends that rigid stainless can’t navigate. We use DuraFlex flexible liners with proper insulation wraps to maintain clearances and prevent condensation. The flexibility doesn’t mean compromise: these are the same liners specified for commercial applications, just adapted to the tight geometry of 1890s construction.
Liner Replacement
Not every “failed liner” needs a full rebuild. In Thompsonville, we frequently find stainless steel liners installed in the 1990s or 2000s that have corroded at the collar, separated at a joint, or been damaged by a chimney fire. We pull the old liner, assess the surrounding masonry, and install a new properly-sized replacement — often completing the job in a single day if the stack structure is sound. This is common in the two-family homes near the old Bigelow mill site where a previous owner did a partial job and left adjacent flues unaddressed.
Partial Chimney Rebuild
When the top courses of brick are spalled, the crown is cracked through, or the flue opening has deteriorated beyond liner anchoring, we rebuild from the roofline up. In Thompsonville, partial rebuilds fail if repointing isn’t extended to the full stack — soft, century-old brick and spalled mortar from freeze-thaw cycles near the Scantic River mean the damage runs deeper than the obvious surface failure. We grind out and repoint the full visible stack, replace damaged brick with matching reclaimed material when possible, and pour a new concrete crown with proper drip edge and flue extension.

Full Chimney Rebuild
For the most compromised stacks — common in the neglected rental inventory off High Street and around the former mill complex — we dismantle and rebuild the entire chimney from the foundation or fireplace throat up. This is the only correct solution when the wythes have separated, the interior is extensively gapped, or multiple flues have collapsed. We spec new flue liners for every served unit, restore proper clearance to combustibles, and bring the structure up to current code. Full rebuilds in Thompsonville typically require coordinating access with multiple tenants; we handle that scheduling directly.
What happens when you call
- 1
A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in Thompsonville
We don’t use hardware-store substitutes. For liner installations, we stock DuraFlex stainless and flexible liners and HeatShield cerfractory resurfacing systems — the same materials specified by chimney industry professionals for commercial and residential work. For crowns, caps, and exterior restoration, we use Gelco and Copperfield components. Keeping this inventory on hand means Thompsonville customers aren’t waiting two weeks for a special-order part while tenants complain or the heating season slips away. When we inspect your stack, we know immediately whether the job requires a standard stocked liner or a custom-ordered diameter, and we tell you that day.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Thompsonville Homes
- Shared stacks with one relined flue and an adjacent unlined flue left in service. In the multi-family blocks closest to the old Bigelow mill site, a single chimney stack often carries two or three separate flues serving different units. A technician who cleans one flue and misses a blocked or cracked adjacent flue in the same stack leaves neighboring tenants exposed to carbon monoxide risk. Flagging shared-stack configurations is a standard part of every job in this neighborhood.
- Improper liner sizing from coal-to-oil-to-wood conversion history. Installing a single 8-inch flue liner in a stack originally carrying two separate coal flues creates poor draft, incomplete combustion, and accelerated creosote buildup. We measure the fireplace opening, flue area, and chimney height against NFPA 211 tables — every time.
- Freeze-thaw spalling in soft, saturated brick. Thompsonville’s mill-era brick was never intended to endure a century of Connecticut River valley moisture cycles. The brick faces pop off, mortar turns to sand, and water infiltrates the interior wythes. Surface repointing without addressing the full stack condition guarantees repeat failure.
- Corroded stainless liners from oil-heat condensate. The sulfuric acid in oil combustion exhaust attacks 304-grade stainless at the collar and first joint. We see this constantly in Thompsonville’s converted mill housing and upgrade to 316Ti alloy with proper condensation management.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Thompsonville, CT
Here’s what liner and rebuild work actually costs in the Thompsonville market:
| Service | Typical Range in Thompsonville |
|---|---|
| Stainless steel liner installation (single flue) | $1,800 – $3,200 |
| Flexible liner with insulation (offset flue) | $2,200 – $3,800 |
| Liner replacement (remove and reinstall) | $1,400 – $2,600 |
| Partial rebuild (roofline up, single flue) | $3,500 – $5,500 |
| Full chimney rebuild (multi-flue, multi-unit) | $5,000 – $8,500+ |
| HeatShield cerfractory flue restore | $1,200 – $2,400 |
What moves you within these ranges: number of flues served, whether the stack is shared across units, accessibility for scaffolding on narrow Thompsonville lots, and the extent of concealed masonry damage we find once work begins. We provide a written, itemized estimate after video inspection — never a verbal ballpark that balloons later. Estimates are free. Call (833) 719-7193 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Thompsonville
We run liner and rebuild jobs throughout the immediate area — Southwood Acres, Enfield proper, Sherwood Manor, and Windsor Locks — and the same Anthony-led crew handles every location. If you own rental property across multiple towns or need coordinated inspections for an estate sale spanning Thompsonville and Enfield, we schedule efficiently rather than making you coordinate separate contractors. Our familiarity with the 06083 zip and surrounding Hartford County mill towns means consistent diagnostics regardless of which side of the town line your property sits.
Serving Thompsonville, CT — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Thompsonville area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Thompsonville
Schedule a video inspection — it’s the only way to be certain, and we offer them free. In Thompsonville’s converted mill housing, we’ve found completely unlined flues, flues with partial clay liners collapsed at the smoke chamber, and “repairs” consisting of nothing more than a spray-on sealant that failed years ago. The age of your building and any fuel conversion history make assumptions dangerous. Call (833) 719-7193 and we’ll camera the flue this week.
No — that’s a carbon monoxide hazard we won’t participate in. In Thompsonville’s shared-stack buildings, adjacent flues interact through cracked common wythes and deteriorated mortar joints. Relining one flue and leaving an adjacent unlined or damaged flue in service creates cross-contamination paths and violates NFPA 211. We inspect every flue in a shared stack and document the condition of each; if multiple units need work, we spec phased scheduling to spread costs without leaving any flue unsafe.
Probably yes. Gas-fired liners are sized for lower temperatures and different draft characteristics; wood combustion produces significantly higher flue gas temperatures and creosote that can overheat an undersized or improperly spec’d liner. We inspect the existing liner’s alloy grade, diameter, and condition, then compare against the requirements of your new wood-burning appliance. In Thompsonville, we’ve replaced numerous 304-grade gas liners with 316Ti wood-rated equivalents. The inspection determines the exact specification.
A partial rebuild from the roofline up typically runs $3,500–$5,500 in Thompsonville, while a full rebuild starts around $5,000 and can exceed $8,500 for multi-flue, multi-unit stacks. The decision point is structural integrity: if the interior wythes have separated, if multiple flues have collapsed, or if the stack leans, partial work is false economy. We show you the camera footage and explain which category your chimney falls into before you commit. Call (833) 719-7193 for an exact assessment — estimates are free.
Usually both, and they’re connected. In Thompsonville’s mill-era cottages, failed chimney crowns allow water directly into the stack, while deteriorated flashing where the chimney penetrates the roof sends runoff into the chase. The soft, porous brick common to these buildings wicks water inward, and by the time you see interior staining, the damage typically involves the crown, the flashing, and multiple courses of brick. We diagnose the full water entry path during inspection and spec repairs that address all sources — not just the obvious one. Call (833) 719-7193 to stop the infiltration before rebuild costs escalate.
Written by Anthony Perez, Owner at Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut, serving Thompsonville and the greater Bridgeport area since 2016.