Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Hell’s Kitchen
A chimney liner or rebuild in Hell’s Kitchen typically costs $2,800–$7,500 depending on whether you’re relining a single flue or rebuilding a shared multi-unit stack, and we can usually inspect within 48 hours. If you own or manage a pre-war tenement in the 10019 ZIP, you’re dealing with chimney systems originally built for coal that now vent gas appliances across four to six apartments — and when those century-old flues crack or get left oversized after boiler conversions, the risk isn’t just a failed inspection. It’s carbon monoxide backdraft into multiple units.

We work in Hell’s Kitchen regularly. Gary Murphy, our owner and lead technician, has relined shared stacks on West 47th Street, rebuilt crowns above buildings near Tenth Avenue, and navigated the tight roof access and DOB compliance timelines that define this neighborhood. We’re familiar with the alley-load constraints, the parapet-line exposure to Hudson-driven moisture, and the inspection triggers that follow gut renovations. Call (844) 660-6590 for a free estimate — we’ll inspect your flue and give you straight numbers.
Why Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers Is Hell’s Kitchen’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
We’re not a dispatch service. Gary Murphy leads every job himself, which means the person quoting your liner replacement is the same person on your roof measuring flue dimensions and fitting our Chimney Liner & Rebuild materials. For Hell’s Kitchen building owners, that’s critical — shared tenement stacks require decisions about liner sizing, appliance bundling, and draft calculation that can’t be delegated to a crew working off a generic work order.
Over 1,100 homeowners and property managers have trusted us across our 11 years of chimney-only work, and our 1,142 verified reviews at a 4.7-star average reflect jobs where Gary was physically present from inspection through completion. We respond to Hell’s Kitchen within 24–48 hours because we know DOB violation deadlines don’t wait. We’ve worked on buildings near the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum, along West 46th’s Restaurant Row conversions, and throughout the Clinton neighborhood’s pre-war housing stock — so when you describe your chimney chase layout, we’ll likely know the building type before we arrive.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Hell’s Kitchen
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
For most Hell’s Kitchen tenements, a stainless steel liner is the right fix. We install DuraFlex and Olympia Chimney stainless systems sized precisely to the remaining appliance load after boiler conversions — critical in this neighborhood where oversized flues are the norm. A six-story stack venting only individual gas water heaters into a flue built for a coal boiler will fail draft and create CO backdraft; we measure total BTU load, calculate minimum flue diameter, and install a continuous liner that restores safe venting across all served units. In Hell’s Kitchen’s 10019 ZIP, this is the most common liner job we do.
Flexible Liner Solutions
Some Hell’s Kitchen chimney stacks have offset flues, corbelled construction, or tight cleanout access that rigid stainless can’t navigate. Flexible liners — particularly DuraFlex’s corrugated systems — bend through offsets while maintaining structural integrity. We use these when we’re working in buildings with the narrow chimney chases typical of 1905–1920 tenements, where the flue path shifts between floors. Gary carries flexible liner inventory sized for Hell’s Kitchen’s common 6″ to 8″ flue dimensions, so we’re not waiting on delivery while your DOB correction deadline ticks.
Liner Replacement
Clay-tile liners in Hell’s Kitchen’s pre-1920 buildings are failing now after a century of thermal cycling, freeze-thaw damage from Hudson moisture, and the shift from coal to gas combustion. We remove deteriorated tile, inspect the surrounding masonry for spalling or mortar loss, and install a new liner system — often with a poured insulation backfill using HeatShield cerfractory foam where the chimney chase runs through interior walls and needs added clearance protection. Liner replacement in Hell’s Kitchen frequently reveals secondary damage: cracked crowns, eroded mortar joints above the parapet, or water staining in upper-floor ceilings. We flag it all, price it upfront, and handle it in one project.
Partial Chimney Rebuild
When the top courses of a Hell’s Kitchen tenement stack have spalled beyond repair — common on west-facing exposures along Eleventh Avenue and West 52nd where Hudson wind drives rain directly into mortar joints — a partial rebuild restores structural integrity without the cost of full demolition. We rebuild from the roofline up, typically 3–6 feet, replacing damaged brick, repointing with matching mortar, and pouring a new concrete crown with proper drip edge and slope. For buildings in Hell’s Kitchen where the chimney serves as a structural element tying multiple floors together, partial rebuild preserves the stack while the new liner handles venting.
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 Hell’s Kitchen
We install HeatShield for cerfractory flue resurfacing and liner insulation backfill, Gelco for stainless steel cap and crown components, and Famco for termination fittings and draft hoods. These aren’t generic hardware-store brands — they’re professional-grade lines specified by manufacturers for high-ventilation, multi-appliance installations like Hell’s Kitchen’s shared tenement stacks. Gary stocks common diameters and fittings locally, which means when we find a cracked liner during your inspection, we’re not ordering parts from a warehouse two states away. For a neighborhood where DOB correction notices come with 30-day windows, that local parts availability matters.

Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Hell’s Kitchen Homes
- Hudson-driven moisture destroying crowns and mortar. Hell’s Kitchen’s western edge catches prevailing westerlies straight off the river, saturating chimney crowns and parapet-level masonry at rates we don’t see in inland Bronx or Queens jobs. Winter freeze-thaw cracks the saturated crown, water enters the flue, and upper-floor tenants spot ceiling stains near chimney chases before anyone smells gas.
- Oversized flues after boiler conversions. When a basement boiler gets swapped for a direct-vent condensing unit, the old chimney stack suddenly vents only water heaters into a flue designed for 150,000+ BTU. Draft collapses. CO spills into apartments. NYC DOB has been citing this exact condition with increasing frequency in Hell’s Kitchen’s renovated buildings.
- Unlined pre-1920 flues failing post-renovation inspection. Many Hell’s Kitchen tenements built before 1920 were never lined at all — bare brick venting coal smoke, later adapted to gas. Gut renovations trigger DOB inspection, and unlined or cracked clay tile fails immediately. We relined a stack on West 47th Street last year after exactly this scenario: fourth-floor ceiling stains, spalled clay tile, DOB violation pending.
- Decorative fireplaces uncovered during luxury renovations. Hell’s Kitchen’s smaller stock of brownstones and mixed-use buildings contains capped fireplaces from the neighborhood’s disinvestment decades. New owners open them for ambiance, only to find unlined flues, deteriorated smoke chambers, and no connection to modern venting. We assess whether relining for occasional use is practical or if the flue needs full rebuild to current code.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Hell’s Kitchen, NY
Here’s what we typically see in the Hell’s Kitchen market:
| Service | Typical Range in Hell’s Kitchen |
|---|---|
| Single-appliance stainless steel liner (1–2 story) | $2,800–$4,200 |
| Multi-unit shared flue liner (3–6 apartments) | $4,500–$7,500 |
| Flexible liner with offset navigation | $3,200–$5,800 |
| Liner replacement with HeatShield insulation backfill | $3,800–$6,200 |
| Partial rebuild (roofline up, 3–6 feet) | $2,200–$4,500 |
| Full chimney rebuild (rare in Hell’s Kitchen tenements) | $8,500–$15,000 |
Three factors push Hell’s Kitchen jobs toward the higher end: multi-unit flue complexity requiring separate liner runs or appliance-specific connections; scaffold or roof-access challenges on 5–7 story buildings with limited setback; and DOB-mandated timelines that compress scheduling. We don’t pad estimates — Gary measures your flue in person, calculates exact material lengths, and gives you a fixed price before work starts. Estimates are free. Call (844) 660-6590 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Hell’s Kitchen
We regularly cross the Hudson for chimney liner and rebuild work in Weehawken, Guttenberg, West New York, and Union City — New Jersey’s dense riverfront towns share Hell’s Kitchen’s pre-war housing stock, multi-unit flue configurations, and exposure to the same Hudson moisture patterns. If you manage properties across the river or need coordinated inspections for a portfolio spanning both sides, we can schedule sequential work.
Serving Hell’s Kitchen, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Hell’s Kitchen 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 Hell’s Kitchen
It depends on the appliance configuration and BTU load, but most Hell’s Kitchen shared stacks can use a single properly-sized continuous liner venting multiple gas water heaters if total load stays within the liner’s capacity and each appliance has proper draft hood connection. We calculate this on site — oversized flues from abandoned boilers are the bigger problem. Call (844) 660-6590 and Gary will measure your actual load and flue dimensions.
NYC DOB and FDNY have increased post-renovation inspections in Hell’s Kitchen’s 10019 ZIP, and unlined pre-1920 flues or cracked clay tile are now routinely cited with Class 1 violations requiring 30-day correction. We’ve seen three such citations on West 46th and West 47th in the past year alone. If you’re planning a gut renovation, inspect the chimney first — it’s cheaper than stopping mid-project for emergency relining.
Yes. We access from the roof and the basement cleanout, working entirely within the chimney chase without entering individual apartments except for brief draft testing at appliance connections. Most Hell’s Kitchen liner replacements complete in one day. We coordinate with building management for roof access and notify tenants of brief water heater shutdowns — typically 2–4 hours while we reconnect venting.
A shared flue serving 4–6 apartments in Hell’s Kitchen typically runs $4,500–$7,500 for stainless steel liner installation, including proper sizing for remaining appliance load after any boiler conversions. Complex offsets, separate liner runs for mixed fuel types, or required partial rebuild of damaged top courses add to that base. We give exact quotes after inspection — call (844) 660-6590 for a free estimate with no obligation.
We typically inspect within 24–48 hours of your call, and we know Hell’s Kitchen’s access constraints — roof hatches, narrow stairwells, keyed entry systems, and the parking realities of Midtown West. Gary carries a full tool load and common liner diameters, so if the inspection reveals a straightforward relining need and access allows, we can sometimes start same-day. For DOB violation deadlines, tell us the date and we’ll prioritize.
Ready to fix your chimney before the next inspection or the next freeze-thaw cycle? Call (844) 660-6590 now for a free estimate. Gary Murphy will inspect your flue personally, explain what your stack actually needs, and give you straight pricing — no dispatchers, no subcontracted crews, no surprises when he shows up.
Written by Gary Murphy, Owner at Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers, serving Hell’s Kitchen and the greater New York metro area since 2013.