Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Corona
Chimney liner installation and rebuild in Corona typically runs $2,800–$7,500 depending on whether we’re dropping a stainless steel liner into an existing flue or rebuilding from the crown down. Most Corona jobs finish in one to two days, and we carry DuraFlex and Olympia Chimney inventory so we’re not waiting on deliveries to Queens.

We know Corona’s blocks well — the attached brick row houses along Roosevelt Avenue, the two-families near Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, the tight lots off Junction Boulevard where ladder access means negotiating power lines and neighboring rooflines. Gary Murphy leads every job himself, and we’ve been driving to 11368 since Sterling Chimney Cleaning started 11 years ago. If your chimney’s showing cracks, your boiler’s venting into an old clay flue, or you’ve got water staining the shared wall with your neighbor, call us at (844) 660-6590. We’ll scope it, explain what we see, and give you a written estimate before any work starts.
Why Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers Is Corona’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
Over 1,100 homeowners have trusted us with their chimneys, and our 1,142 verified reviews averaging 4.7 stars reflect what happens when the same technician who owns the company shows up to do the work. Gary Murphy doesn’t dispatch crews — he leads every job himself, which means the person inspecting your flue is the same person who decides on materials, signs off on code compliance, and stands behind the warranty.
That matters in Corona, where chimneys aren’t standalone structures. The attached and semi-detached brick row houses built here in the 1920s–1940s share party-wall flues between adjacent properties. One cracked liner doesn’t just affect your unit — it creates carbon monoxide and moisture intrusion risk for the family next door. Gary’s scoped enough of these to spot the warning signs fast: efflorescence on shared brick, rusted boiler vent connectors, or that telltale tar-like condensation staining inside an oversized coal-era flue.
We typically respond to Corona calls within the same day or next morning, and we stock our Chimney Liner & Rebuild materials locally so we’re not stretching your timeline waiting for parts. From your first sweep to a full liner rebuild, one specialist handles it.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Corona
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
Corona’s pre-war row houses were built with 12×12 or 10×10 clay tile flues designed for coal-fired furnaces. When those systems converted to gas or oil in the 1960s–1980s, most flues were never resized. A modern gas boiler needs a 6-inch or 7-inch vent — not a gaping coal-era shaft. We install DuraFlex and Olympia Chimney stainless steel liners that create a properly sized, corrosion-resistant vent path inside your existing flue. The stainless handles acidic condensate that eats clay tile, and it brings your system into compliance with NYC Department of Buildings and Con Edison requirements. In Corona, this isn’t an upgrade — it’s often the difference between passing inspection and getting a violation notice.
Flexible Liner Installation
Not every Corona chimney runs straight. In row houses with offset flues or bends around structural members, rigid stainless pipe won’t fit. We use DuraFlex flexible liners that navigate bends while maintaining proper draft and clearance to combustibles. Flexible liners are especially useful in Corona’s older three-family homes where the original builder took shortcuts to squeeze a flue between floor joists. Gary assesses each run with a video scope before recommending flexible versus rigid — no guesswork, no “we’ll see when we get in there.”
Liner Replacement & Repair
Sometimes the liner’s partially failed but the surrounding masonry is sound. We see this in Corona homes where a previous owner installed a cheap aluminum liner that corroded through, or where a clay tile flue has isolated spalling but intact mortar elsewhere. We can extract the damaged section and install a new stainless insert, or in certain cases apply HeatShield cerfractory resurfacing to restore a clay flue’s integrity. The key is honest assessment — we don’t sell full rebuilds when targeted repair will do, and we don’t patch what needs replacement. Corona’s freeze-thaw cycles punish half-measures.
Partial & Full Chimney Rebuild
When the crown’s cracked, the brick faces are spalling, and water’s migrating into shared walls, a liner alone won’t fix it. We scoped a two-family attached row house on 104th Street in Corona and found a 1930s clay tile flue, 12×12 inches, venting a new gas combi boiler with no liner. The oversized flue was trapping acidic water, spalling the tiles, and showing early-stage freeze-thaw cracking in the crown. We installed a 6-inch DuraFlex stainless steel liner and sealed the crown — the homeowner avoided a DOB violation and got a fully code-compliant system. For worse damage, we rebuild from the roofline up, matching existing brick and installing proper cricket flashing. Full rebuilds in Corona’s dense housing require careful staging — we’ve learned which blocks allow material drops and where we need to hand-carry everything up.

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 Corona
We install DuraFlex stainless and flexible liners because their .006-inch and .012-inch wall options let us match the right gauge to your appliance output and fuel type — critical when you’re downsizing a coal-era flue for modern gas. For crown sealing and flue resurfacing, we use HeatShield’s cerfractory mixture, which handles the thermal cycling that cracks standard mortar in Queens winters. Olympia Chimney’s smooth-wall liners give us another option for straight runs where draft efficiency matters most. We keep common Corona sizes in stock: 6-inch and 7-inch diameters in 25-foot and 35-foot lengths, which covers most two-story and three-story row houses in 11368 without waiting on freight.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Corona Homes
- Coal-era clay tile flues left unlined after gas conversion trap acidic condensation, corroding mortar joints even on clean-burning gas. We find this in nearly every pre-war Corona row house we inspect — the homeowner assumes gas burns clean, so the flue must be fine. It’s not. The oversized flue cools the exhaust too fast, condensing sulfuric acid that attacks the clay from the inside out.
- Shared party-wall chimneys between attached homes allow a single cracked flue to leak CO and moisture into adjacent units before anyone notices. In Corona’s dense blocks, your neighbor’s deferred maintenance becomes your air quality problem. We always inspect shared-wall conditions and recommend coordinated repairs when both sides show deterioration.
- Freeze-thaw cycles in Queens penetrate unsealed crowns of older chimneys, causing spalling brick and lateral water seepage into shared walls. Temperatures cross 32°F repeatedly through winter here, and every freeze expands water in micro-cracks. By March, the crown’s crumbling and water’s tracking down between your interior wall and the brick veneer.
- Original oversized coal-era clay tile flues now venting modern gas boilers with no liner create persistent condensation and tar-like creosote buildup. This failure mode surprises Corona homeowners who switched from oil to gas and assumed the existing flue would handle it. The gap between flue size and appliance output puts the installation squarely under NYC Local Law 152 scrutiny for gas venting compliance.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Corona, NY
| Service | Typical Range in Corona |
|---|---|
| Stainless steel liner (straight flue, 1-2 story) | $2,800 – $4,200 |
| Flexible liner with offsets/bends | $3,500 – $5,500 |
| Liner replacement (remove old, install new) | $3,200 – $4,800 |
| Partial rebuild (crown, top 3-5 courses) | $2,500 – $4,500 |
| Full chimney rebuild (roofline up) | $6,500 – $12,000 |
| HeatShield flue resurfacing | $1,800 – $3,200 |
What moves you up or down in these ranges: flue height (three-story Corona row houses need more material), access difficulty (tight lots off 108th Street versus open corners on Northern Boulevard), whether we need to coordinate with your neighbor for party-wall work, and the condition of the existing flue — a fully collapsed clay tile takes longer to extract than one with isolated damage. We don’t quote over the phone for liner and rebuild work; we need to scope the flue and assess the crown in person. Estimates are free, and we explain exactly what we found before any pricing discussion.
We Also Serve Cities Near Corona
We work across central and western Queens regularly — Elmhurst’s pre-war stock has similar coal-conversion liner issues, Jackson Heights and East Elmhurst share the attached-row-house construction with party-wall complications, and Woodside’s mix of old and newer housing keeps us busy with everything from liner drops to full rebuilds. If you’re in 11368 or nearby and your chimney needs attention, we’re already driving these blocks.
Serving Corona, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Corona 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 Corona
Yes — if your gas boiler vents into an unlined or improperly sized clay tile flue, you’re out of compliance with NYC DOB and Con Edison requirements, and you’re risking accelerated flue deterioration from acidic condensation. The oversized coal-era flue cools exhaust too quickly, causing condensate that corrodes mortar and spalls tile from the inside. We see this condition in most pre-war Corona homes we inspect. Call (844) 660-6590 and we’ll scope it to confirm — estimates are free.
Sometimes, but often the party-wall construction means liner failure on one side affects both units through shared mortar joints and common air gaps. We assess each side independently with a video scope, then explain what can be isolated versus what needs coordinated repair. In Corona’s attached housing, we’ve learned that addressing both sides together usually costs less than two separate mobilizations, and it eliminates the liability gap if your neighbor’s deferred maintenance damages your new liner. We’ll walk you through the options after inspection.
A typical stainless steel liner installation in a Corona two-story row house runs $2,800–$4,200; flexible liners for offset flues run $3,500–$5,500. Three-story homes or those with significant clay tile extraction add $800–$1,500. We scope every flue before quoting, so the estimate reflects your actual conditions — not a guess. Call (844) 660-6590 for a free written estimate.
If the cracking is limited to the crown surface and the top 2-3 courses of brick show minor spalling, a crown rebuild with proper waterproofing usually suffices — typically $2,500–$4,500. If freeze-thaw damage has penetrated deeper, causing widespread brick spalling or mortar joint failure below the roofline, we recommend full rebuild from the roofline up. Corona’s repeated freeze-thaw cycles punish crowns especially hard, so we err toward replacement rather than patching what will fail again in two winters. We’ll show you the scope footage and explain which category you’re in.
Yes — DuraFlex flexible liners are specifically engineered to navigate offsets and bends while maintaining proper draft and clearance. In Corona’s older row houses, we regularly encounter flues with 15- or 30-degree offsets around structural members; rigid pipe won’t make those turns. Gary maps each flue with a video scope before specifying flexible versus rigid, so the liner we install matches your chimney’s actual geometry, not an idealized straight line. Call (844) 660-6590 to schedule a scope — we’ll know within 20 minutes whether flexible is your solution.
Ready to get your Corona chimney compliant and safe? Gary Murphy will scope your flue, explain what we find in plain language, and give you a written estimate with no obligation. Whether it’s a liner drop for your gas conversion or a full rebuild after years of freeze-thaw damage, we handle it start to finish — no subcontractors, no handoffs. Call (844) 660-6590 today for your free estimate.
Written by Gary Murphy, Owner at Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers, serving Corona and Queens since 2014.