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Crawl Space Encapsulation Montgomery County, PA

Stop What's Under Your Floor From Getting In

Crawl space encapsulation seals out moisture, mold, and bad air protecting your home from the ground up. Get it done right the first time.

What Makes Our Work Different

Federally Licensed Environmental Contractor

We hold federal licensing for hazardous materials a credential most waterproofing companies simply don’t have and can’t claim.

Two Decades Serving This Region

We’ve been working in Montgomery County homes for over 20 years we know the housing stock, the soil, and the problems.

Multi-Hazard Inspection Included

We check for asbestos, mold, and lead before sealing anything in something a waterproofing-only company cannot safely do.

Crawl Space Encapsulation in Montgomery County, PA

Your Crawl Space Affects More Than You Think

Most homeowners don’t think about what’s happening under their floors until something forces them to a smell they can’t locate, floors that stay cold no matter what the thermostat says, or a home inspector’s report that stops a sale in its tracks. In Montgomery County, where heavy spring rains, humid summers, and clay-heavy soils create constant moisture pressure on older homes, crawl space problems are more common than most people realize. Crawl space encapsulation is the process of sealing the floor, walls, and sometimes the ceiling of your crawl space with a heavy-duty vapor barrier cutting off the moisture, outside air, and soil gases that cause mold growth, wood rot, and poor indoor air quality. It’s not a quick fix or a coat of paint over a problem. Done correctly, it addresses the source. Up to 60% of the air inside your home passes through the crawl space before it reaches you. What’s living under your floor is eventually living in your home.

What Makes Our Work Different

The musty smell that’s been drifting through your first floor finally goes away — for good.
Your floors feel warmer and more stable because conditioned air isn’t escaping through an unsealed crawl space.
Heating and cooling costs drop — encapsulation can improve energy efficiency by up to 20% by closing off a major gap in your home’s thermal envelope.
Mold on floor joists and subfloor sheathing stops spreading once the moisture feeding it is cut off at the source.
Your home inspection report looks better — an encapsulated crawl space is a documented asset, not a liability, in Montgomery County’s real estate market.
You stop worrying about what’s under there, because you’ll actually know — and it’ll be sealed, dry, and documented.

Crawl Space Waterproofing and Hazard Assessment

We Look Before We Seal — Every Time

Here’s something most waterproofing companies won’t tell you: if there’s existing mold, asbestos pipe insulation, or deteriorating materials in your crawl space, sealing over them doesn’t solve the problem. It locks it in. That’s where we’re different. Because we’re a federally licensed environmental contractor not just a waterproofing company we inspect for mold, asbestos-containing materials, and lead before any encapsulation work begins. In Montgomery County, where a significant portion of the housing stock was built between 1940 and 1975, this matters. Asbestos was commonly used in pipe insulation, floor tiles, and duct wrap during that era. It shows up in crawl spaces regularly, and most contractors aren’t equipped to handle it. If we find something that needs to be addressed first, we handle it. You don’t have to find a second company, coordinate schedules, or wonder whether the remediation was done correctly before the encapsulation started. We do both under one roof, with one point of accountability.

Fast Quotes

Modern Equipment

Clean Finish

Vapor Barrier Installation Montgomery County PA

Professional Materials Make the Difference

Not all vapor barriers are the same. The 6 mil plastic sheeting you can buy at a hardware store tears under foot traffic, fails at seams, and does almost nothing to stop vapor from rising through a dirt crawl space floor. It’s not encapsulation it’s a temporary fix that gives a false sense of security. We install heavy-duty polyethylene barriers in the 12 to 20 mil range, covering the floor, walls, piers, and rim joists. Every seam is overlapped and sealed with vapor barrier tape. Vents are addressed. Where water intrusion or ongoing humidity is a concern, we pair the barrier with a properly sized dehumidifier to manage what the barrier alone can’t stop. The goal is a system not just a sheet of plastic. When the job is done, your crawl space should be dry, sealed, and built to stay that way.
Our Process

How It Works

A simple process designed to keep everything clear, efficient, and stress-free from start to finish.

Thorough Inspection First

We assess moisture levels, existing mold, structural condition, and any hazardous materials before recommending a single thing.

Address What We Find

If mold remediation or asbestos abatement is needed before encapsulation, we handle it — no subcontracting, no gaps in accountability.

Install and Document the System

We install the full encapsulation system and document the completed work — so you have a clear record for insurance, resale, or peace of mind.

FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

Get answers to the most common questions about our demolition and interior cutting services.

What is crawl space encapsulation and how is it different from a vapor barrier?
A vapor barrier is a single component — usually a sheet of polyethylene laid over the crawl space floor. Encapsulation is the complete system. It includes a heavy-duty liner covering the floor, walls, piers, and rim joists, sealed seams, closed vents, and typically a dehumidifier to manage ongoing humidity. Think of a vapor barrier as one piece of the puzzle. Encapsulation is the whole picture. The distinction matters because a floor-only vapor barrier with open vents and unsealed walls still allows warm, humid outside air to enter and condense on surfaces — which means mold can still grow, just in different spots. Full encapsulation eliminates that cycle.
Nationally, professional crawl space encapsulation runs between $1,500 and $15,000, with most jobs landing somewhere around $5,000 depending on the size of the space and what’s already going on in there. In Montgomery County, where a lot of homes have older construction, dirt floors, and sometimes existing mold or hazardous materials, the scope can vary significantly. Labor typically accounts for 50 to 70 percent of the total cost. The best way to get an accurate number is a real inspection — not a phone estimate. We’ll tell you exactly what we find and what it’ll take to fix it before any work begins.
No — and any contractor who says otherwise is cutting a corner that will cost you later. Sealing mold behind a vapor barrier doesn’t kill it. It keeps it in a dark, enclosed space where it can continue to spread and eventually compromise the structural integrity of your floor joists and subfloor. The right sequence is: remediate the mold first, then encapsulate. Because we’re a certified mold remediation company in addition to handling encapsulation, we can do both in one engagement. You’re not coordinating two separate contractors or hoping the handoff goes smoothly — we manage the full process.
Montgomery County sits on Piedmont geology — clay-heavy soils that hold water instead of draining it. When it rains heavily in spring or snowmelt runs off in March, that water doesn’t move away from your foundation quickly. It sits, it saturates, and moisture vapor pushes up through dirt crawl space floors. Add to that the region’s summer humidity, where relative humidity regularly exceeds 70 to 75 percent in July and August, and you have warm, moist outdoor air flowing into vented crawl spaces and condensing on every cool surface it touches. Communities near the Schuylkill River and Wissahickon Creek watersheds — including parts of Conshohocken, Norriton Township, and Ambler — face even higher groundwater pressure. The climate here is genuinely hard on crawl spaces, and encapsulation isn’t optional for most older homes in Montgomery County — it’s a matter of when, not whether.
For most residential jobs, the encapsulation itself takes a few days. If mold remediation or asbestos abatement is required beforehand, that adds time — though we’ll give you a clear timeline upfront once we’ve completed the inspection. The factors that extend a job are usually existing damage like mold on joists, deteriorating insulation, or standing water, plus crawl space size. We won’t rush through it to hit an arbitrary deadline, but we also won’t drag it out. Most homeowners in Montgomery County are back to normal within a week, even on more complex jobs.
Yes — and in Montgomery County’s real estate market, it can be the difference between a deal closing and a deal falling apart. Home inspectors flag crawl space moisture, mold, and unsealed dirt floors routinely, and buyers’ agents know what those findings mean. A properly encapsulated crawl space with documented work shows up on an inspection report as an improvement, not a liability. We work with sellers, buyers, and their agents regularly — often on tight timelines when a closing date is already set. If you’re in that situation, call us early. We understand what’s at stake and we move accordingly.