Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Harrison
Chimney liner replacement and chimney rebuilds in Harrison typically run $2,800–$8,500 depending on scope, and most inspections can be scheduled within 48 hours. If you’re seeing cracked mortar, smelling fuel odors upstairs, or dealing with a heating technician who keeps pointing at your chimney, you’re probably looking at liner failure in one of Harrison’s older masonry stacks.

We work Harrison regularly — from the village core out to the Purchase Street loop and the Halstead Avenue corridor. Gary Murphy leads every job himself, so the person quoting your work is the same person on your roof. Call (844) 660-6590 for a free estimate, or read on to understand why Harrison’s 1920s–1950s housing stock creates liner problems you won’t find in newer Westchester suburbs.
Why Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers Is Harrison’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
We’ve built our reputation across Westchester one chimney at a time — 1,142 verified reviews averaging 4.7 stars, with Harrison homeowners specifically calling out Gary’s willingness to explain what he found and why it mattered. That’s the difference when the owner is also the lead technician: no information filtered through a sales desk or a subcontractor who won’t be back.
Our response time to Harrison is typically same-day or next-day for urgent calls — creosote odors, visible crown cracks after winter, or boiler shutdowns traced to draft failure. We know the village’s building patterns: the brick colonials near Union Avenue, the cape cods off Harrison Avenue, the two-family homes around the 10528 core. That familiarity speeds diagnosis. We’re not relearning your chimney type on your dime.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team carries the full range of liner diameters and rebuild materials, so we’re not ordering parts after we’ve already started. For Harrison’s older housing stock, that matters — we’ve seen too many jobs delayed because a contractor didn’t stock the right diameter for an oversized coal-era flue.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Harrison
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
For most Harrison homes with failed terra cotta liners, we install DuraFlex stainless steel liners — 316Ti alloy for wood-burning flues, 304 for gas and oil. These liners handle the acidic condensation that destroys clay in Harrison’s oversized, underheated flues. A typical stainless steel liner installation in Harrison runs $2,800–$4,200 for a single-appliance flue, including removal of damaged terra cotta, proper insulation pack, and top plate with cap. We size them precisely to your connected appliance — critical in Harrison, where that original 10×10 or 12×12 coal flue needs to be stepped down to a 6-inch or 7-inch liner for modern oil or gas equipment.
Flexible Liner Systems
Flexible liners navigate offset flues and minor chimney bends common in Harrison’s 1930s–1940s construction, where chimneys were built around stairwells or kitchen chases. We use Olympia Chimney and Famco flexible systems when the flue path isn’t straight enough for rigid pipe. Flexible liner installation in Harrison typically costs $3,200–$4,800, with the premium reflecting the additional labor to snake and insulate the liner properly. These systems are particularly useful in Harrison’s tighter village lots where exterior chimney demolition isn’t practical.
Liner Replacement & Repair
Not every damaged liner needs full replacement. We evaluate whether HeatShield cerfractory resurfacing can restore a clay liner with isolated joint gaps or minor spalling — a viable option when the terra cotta is structurally sound but the mortar joints have deteriorated. HeatShield application in Harrison runs $1,800–$2,800, roughly half the cost of stainless relining. We only recommend this when the flue is properly sized for the connected appliance, which rules it out for many Harrison homes with coal-era oversizing. Gary will show you the camera footage and explain which path makes sense for your specific setup.
Partial Chimney Rebuild
Harrison’s 30–40 annual freeze-thaw cycles destroy chimney crowns and upper masonry. When the crown is cracked, the wash is eroded, and water has penetrated the upper courses, we perform partial rebuilds — typically the top 3–6 feet of the stack — using matching brick and proper crown construction with drip edges and expansion joints. Partial rebuilds in Harrison range from $3,500–$6,000 depending on accessibility and whether the flue needs relining simultaneously. We’ve done this work on fieldstone chimneys near the Silver Lake border and brick stacks throughout the 10528 village core.
Full Chimney Rebuild
When freeze-thaw damage, settling, or long-deferred maintenance has compromised the structural integrity of the entire stack, we rebuild from the roofline up or from the foundation. Full rebuilds in Harrison typically run $6,500–$12,000, with the upper end reflecting multi-flue structures or matching historic brick. We handle the full scope — demolition, structural assessment, rebuild, liner installation, and crown — so you’re not coordinating multiple contractors. Gary manages every phase personally.

What happens when you call
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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 Harrison
We install and stock HeatShield, Gelco, and Olympia Chimney products for Harrison jobs — not because they’re the cheapest, but because they perform predictably in our local conditions. HeatShield’s cerfractory mix withstands the thermal cycling of Harrison’s undersized oil burners in oversized flues. Gelco caps and dampers seal out the driving rain that accelerates freeze-thaw damage. Olympia’s flexible liners handle the offset flues we find in village-core construction. We keep common diameters and fittings on our truck, which means faster turnaround and no waiting on freight for standard Harrison chimney configurations.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Harrison Homes
- Oversized terra cotta liners causing chronic condensation. Harrison’s 1920s–1950s colonials and capes were built with flues sized for coal furnaces. After conversion to oil, those 10×10 or 12×12 clay liners run too cool, producing acidic condensation that destroys mortar joints within three heating seasons. The symptom homeowners notice first: a petroleum odor in upstairs bedrooms, often misdiagnosed as a boiler problem.
- Freeze-thaw destruction of crowns and upper masonry. Harrison’s interior Westchester location delivers 30–40 freeze-thaw cycles each winter. Water penetrates cracked crowns, expands when frozen, and spalls brick or disintegrates mortar. By spring, what started as a hairline crack requires partial rebuild rather than simple sealing.
- Soot glaze from low flue gas temperatures. In Harrison’s coal-era chimneys connected to modern oil burners, flue gas temperatures often stay below 250°F — the threshold for complete combustion product evacuation. The result is a thick, oily soot coating that restricts draft, triggers carbon monoxide risk, and produces that persistent fuel smell.
- Structural compromise from deferred liner replacement. Homeowners who delay liner work — often because the symptoms are misattributed to the heating appliance — eventually face spalled clay tiles, shifted flue liners, and damaged chimney walls. At that point, liner replacement escalates to partial or full rebuild.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Harrison, NY
| Service | Typical Range in Harrison |
|---|---|
| Chimney inspection with video scan | $175–$250 |
| HeatShield liner resurfacing | $1,800–$2,800 |
| Stainless steel liner (single appliance) | $2,800–$4,200 |
| Flexible liner system | $3,200–$4,800 |
| Partial chimney rebuild | $3,500–$6,000 |
| Full chimney rebuild | $6,500–$12,000 |
These ranges reflect Harrison’s specific market — labor costs, material access, and the prevalence of older masonry that requires more careful handling than new construction. What moves you toward the higher end: multi-flue structures, difficult roof access, matching historic brick, or combining liner work with rebuild. We provide itemized, upfront quotes before any work begins. Estimates are free — call (844) 660-6590 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Harrison
Our service radius covers Rye, Mamaroneck, Larchmont, and Wykagyl — each with their own chimney characteristics, from Rye’s waterfront exposure to Larchmont’s pre-war stock. If you’re in a neighboring community and found this page searching Harrison chimney liner services, we likely cover your address. Call to confirm.
Serving Harrison, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Harrison 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 Harrison
Probably, if the flue is still sized for the original coal furnace. We inspect with a video camera to confirm, but Harrison’s 1930s colonials almost always have 10×10 or larger terra cotta liners that run too cool for modern oil or gas equipment. That low temperature causes acidic condensation and soot glaze that clay cannot withstand long-term. Call (844) 660-6590 for a camera inspection — we’ll show you exactly what your flue looks like.
The odor is likely coming from a soot-glazed, oversized flue liner in your chimney, not your boiler. When Harrison’s coal-era chimneys are connected to properly sized modern oil burners, the flue gas temperature drops too low to carry combustion products up and out. Instead, they condense on the liner walls, producing oily soot that off-gasses petroleum vapors — often drawn into upstairs rooms by stack effect. We relined a 1930s colonial on the Purchase Street loop with exactly this problem: the homeowner’s boiler had been serviced twice, but the petroleum odor persisted until we installed a 6-inch DuraFlex stainless steel liner that restored proper draft and eliminated the smell, then capped the chimney with a new crown.
Not always. If the cracks are limited to the crown and haven’t allowed water into the upper brick courses, we can rebuild or resurface the crown alone — typically $800–$1,500. If water has penetrated and spalled brick or deteriorated mortar joints below, partial rebuild of the upper 3–6 feet is the right fix. We evaluate with a thorough upper-stack inspection after Harrison’s winter season. Call (844) 660-6590 for a post-winter assessment.
We primarily install DuraFlex stainless steel liners, Olympia Chimney flexible systems, and apply HeatShield cerfractory resurfacing where appropriate. For caps, dampers, and accessories, we use Gelco and Famco products. These are professional-grade lines, not hardware-store stock — chosen for performance in Harrison’s specific conditions of acidic condensation and freeze-thaw cycling.
Annually, without exception — and ideally in spring, after Harrison’s 30–40 freeze-thaw cycles have done their damage. The combination of coal-era flue sizing, oil-fired condensation, and aggressive winter weather makes Harrison chimneys deteriorate faster than systems in milder or newer-construction areas. An annual Level 2 inspection with video scan catches liner failure before it requires rebuild. Schedule yours at (844) 660-6590; estimates are free.
Ready to solve your chimney problem? Gary Murphy will inspect your flue personally, explain what he finds, and give you an upfront, itemized quote. No subcontracted crews. No surprises. Call (844) 660-6590 today for your free estimate — we typically schedule Harrison inspections within 24–48 hours.
Written by Gary Murphy, Owner at Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers, serving Harrison and Westchester County since 2013.