Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Manhattan
Chimney liner installation and rebuild in Manhattan typically runs $2,800–$7,500 depending on flue configuration, access complexity, and whether you’re dealing with a single-family brownstone or a multi-unit co-op stack. Most stainless steel liner replacements in Manhattan take one to two days once rooftop access is cleared, though co-op board approvals can add a week. Call (844) 660-6590 for a free estimate—Gary Murphy personally assesses every job.

We’re Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers, and we’ve spent 11 years specializing in exactly one trade. Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team works regularly in Manhattan’s pre-war housing stock—from Murray Hill brownstones to Upper West Side co-ops—where shared masonry stacks, century-old clay flue tiles, and rooftop access through building supers are simply how the job gets done. We know the 10048 ZIP corridor and surrounding Manhattan blocks well enough to flag likely problems before we ever set up a ladder.
Manhattan’s island geography changes the work. Wind-driven moisture off the Hudson and East River corridors hits rooftop chimney crowns harder than inland Westchester County, and freeze-thaw cycling through January and February opens hairline cracks in 19th-century mortar joints that suburban technicians rarely encounter. The urban heat island moderates the coldest nights slightly, but it does nothing to stop the moisture infiltration that actually destroys chimneys here. That’s why we treat every Manhattan liner install as a waterproofing project too—crown, cap, and flashing inspected as standard, not upsells.
Why Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers Is Manhattan’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
Over 1,100 homeowners have trusted us with their chimney systems, and our 1,142 verified reviews averaging 4.7 stars represent one of the deepest proof records you’ll find in this trade. Manhattan customers specifically mention Gary Murphy’s name in their feedback—not a dispatcher, not a crew lead, but the owner himself on their roof or in their flue. That’s the difference between a franchise chain and an owner-operator who stakes his reputation on every job.
Response time to Manhattan from our Yonkers base is typically same-day or next-day for urgent calls. We don’t subcontract. Gary leads every job himself, which means the person diagnosing your flue is the same person deciding whether you need a partial rebuild or a flexible liner retrofit. No handoffs, no “the specialist will call you back.”
We understand Manhattan’s building ecology: co-op boards requiring NYC Department of Buildings compliance documentation, supers who need 48-hour notice for rooftop key access, shared party-wall chimney stacks where one building’s work affects the neighbor’s draft. Eleven years, one specialty—and Manhattan’s dense housing has taught us plenty.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Manhattan
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
Stainless steel liners are our most common Manhattan install, and for good reason. Pre-war brownstones and tenements with original clay-tile flues—often installed between 1880 and 1930—suffer tile collapse, spalling, and mortar deterioration that vent combustion gases into wall cavities or neighboring units. A DuraFlex stainless steel liner creates a continuous, sealed combustion pathway inside the existing brick stack without requiring full masonry demolition.
In Manhattan’s multi-unit buildings, this gets complicated fast. When a chimney liner fails in a shared stack, every apartment above and below that flue has to stop using their fireplace or boiler until repair is complete. Co-op boards handle these under NYC DOB emergency-repair permits, and we’ve navigated that paperwork enough times to keep jobs moving. A typical stainless steel liner install in Manhattan runs $3,200–$5,800 for a single flue, with multi-flue stacks scaling from there.
Flexible Liner Retrofit
Not every Manhattan chimney is straight. Offset flues in 1890s row houses, transitions around structural beams, and chimney bends added during decades of renovation often rule out rigid stainless. We use flexible liners—typically DuraFlex or Olympia Chimney products—that navigate offsets while maintaining the same corrosion resistance and warranty coverage.
The field vignette that sticks with us: In a 1908 Murray Hill brownstone where a shared boiler flue had never been relined, we installed a DuraFlex stainless steel liner after the co-op board approved an emergency DOB permit. The original clay tiles had collapsed inside the brick stack, venting carbon monoxide toward a neighbor’s kitchen exhaust—our team worked with the super to secure rooftop gear between a water tower and an adjacent party-wall chimney, completing the partial rebuild and flexible liner in a single Saturday. Flexible liner jobs in Manhattan typically range $2,800–$4,500.
Liner Replacement & Removal
Sometimes the existing liner is worse than nothing—corroded aluminum, improperly sized clay, or a previous install that created condensation traps. We remove failed liners completely, inspect the surrounding masonry with a video scan, and reinstall correctly. Manhattan’s converted boiler flues are a special case: NYC’s Clean Heat Program forced thousands of buildings off heavy No. 6 and No. 4 fuel oil, leaving sulfurous oil-soot deposits baked into flue walls. Standard dry brushing won’t touch it. We use wet-chemistry cleaning methods—HeatShield-compatible prep protocols—to strip that residue before the new liner goes in. Skip this step and the oil soot re-adheres to your new stainless within a season.

Partial Chimney Rebuild
When the flue is sound but the structure around it isn’t, partial rebuild makes sense. We see this constantly in Manhattan: crowns cracked by freeze-thaw, spalling brick from river-corridor moisture, mortar joints ground to powder. A partial rebuild addresses the damaged section—typically the top 4–6 feet of stack, crown, and wash—while preserving the flue and interior liner you’ve already invested in.
Manhattan pricing for partial rebuild runs $4,500–$7,500, heavily dependent on scaffolding or boom access requirements. Rooftop work on a six-story walk-up with a water tower blocking crane placement is a different job than a brownstone with rear-yard ladder access. We assess this in person—photos from the super rarely tell the full story.
What happens when you call
- 1
A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
- 2
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 Manhattan
We install and work with professional-grade lines because material choice in a Manhattan chimney isn’t a place to cut corners. HeatShield’s cerfractory flue coating system lets us resurface clay flues that are structurally intact but pitted or cracked—often the right call in landmark districts where full liner replacement triggers additional review. Gelco’s stainless caps and Famco dampers handle the wind and moisture load from the Hudson corridor better than generic hardware-store stock. We keep common sizes and fittings on hand to minimize wait times for Manhattan customers, and we source Olympia Chimney and Copperfield specialty components with two-day turnaround when needed.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Manhattan Homes
- Collapsed clay tiles in shared multi-unit stacks. One tenant’s neglected flue sends debris down the shared chase, blocking neighbors’ draft or creating carbon monoxide pathways. We video-scan the full stack height to map exactly which flues are compromised before proposing any work.
- Freeze-thaw crown failure from river-corridor exposure. Manhattan’s coastal winter cycles crack unprotected crowns in as little as two seasons. Every liner install we do includes crown condition assessment—because a new liner venting into a saturated stack is wasted money.
- Improper oil-to-gas conversion cleanup. Buildings that switched fuels under Local Laws 38 and 97 still have baked No. 6 oil soot lining their boiler flues. Standard brushes polish it; we dissolve it. Installing a new liner over that residue is like painting over grease.
- Access delays from missing co-op documentation. We maintain DOB-compliant insurance documentation and provide certified-sweep paperwork upfront, because one missing signature from a building manager can stall a job for weeks. We handle this coordination before we schedule, not after we show up.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Manhattan, NY
| Service | Typical Range in Manhattan |
|---|---|
| Stainless steel liner (single flue) | $3,200 – $5,800 |
| Flexible liner retrofit | $2,800 – $4,500 |
| Liner replacement with oil-soot remediation | $3,800 – $6,200 |
| Partial rebuild (crown, top courses, cap) | $4,500 – $7,500 |
| Full chimney rebuild with new liner | $8,500 – $14,000+ |
What moves the needle: flue height (Manhattan’s six-story walk-ups add material), access complexity (water towers, party walls, boom permits), and whether we’re working around active boiler systems that can’t be shut down for more than a few hours. Co-op buildings with DOB filing requirements add permit fees that we pass through at cost. We don’t quote blind over the phone for Manhattan work—the variables are too specific. Call (844) 660-6590 and Gary Murphy will walk your roof or flue personally, same week in most cases. Estimates are free.
We Also Serve Cities Near Manhattan
Our chimney liner and rebuild work extends to Hell’s Kitchen and the West Side waterfront, across the Hudson to Weehawken and Union City, and through the Queensboro corridor into Long Island City. Same owner-led service, same material specs, same direct line to Gary Murphy.
Serving Manhattan, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Manhattan 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 Manhattan
Yes. Baked No. 6 and No. 4 fuel-oil soot doesn’t disappear when the burner changes. The sulfurous residue remains bonded to clay flue tiles and unlined brick, and it will re-adhere to a new stainless liner if not chemically stripped first. We use wet-chemistry scrubbing protocols—HeatShield-compatible prep—before any liner install in converted Manhattan boiler flues. Call (844) 660-6590 to schedule a flue assessment; estimates are free.
Yes, if the flues are properly separated within the shared stack. Most Manhattan pre-war multi-flue chimneys have dividing pargeting or tile separation between flues, and we video-scan to confirm integrity before isolating one unit. If the divider is compromised, we recommend addressing it—because one tenant’s exhaust leaking into another’s flue is a building-wide hazard, not a single-unit repair. We coordinate with supers and co-op boards to schedule work that minimizes disruption to non-affected units.
Typically: proof of DOB-compliant liability insurance, a written scope of work with material specifications, certified chimney sweep credentials, and sometimes a structural engineer’s letter for full rebuilds. We provide all of this as standard—our paperwork package has been accepted by Manhattan co-op boards from Murray Hill to the Upper West Side. The most common delay isn’t missing documents; it’s the board meeting schedule. We prepare everything in advance so you’re ready when the meeting date arrives.
A properly installed 316Ti stainless steel liner should last 20–30 years, even in Manhattan’s moisture-heavy environment. The critical variable isn’t the metal—it’s the installation quality. Crown and cap integrity, proper sizing for your appliance, and correct insulation around the liner (required by NFPA 211 for optimal draft and condensation control) matter more than the brand name. We inspect and document all three before signing off. Poor installs fail in five years. Ours don’t.
Probably a liner, but we need to see inside first. Many 1910 Manhattan chimneys have sound structural brick but deteriorated clay flue tiles—or no liner at all. A stainless or flexible liner inserted into intact masonry restores safe venting without the cost and disruption of rebuild. We video-scan every century-old flue we encounter; if the brick is spalling, the mortar is powder, or the stack has shifted, we’ll tell you straight that partial rebuild is the honest call. Call (844) 660-6590 for a no-charge assessment—Gary Murphy handles these evaluations personally.
Written by Gary Murphy, Owner at Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers, serving Manhattan since 2014.