Fast, Reliable Chimney Cap & Crown Across Greenpoint
Chimney cap and crown work in Greenpoint typically runs $340–$890 depending on whether you need a simple cap replacement or full crown rebuild, and Robert Garcia handles most jobs same-week. If you’re on Calyer Street, McGuinness Boulevard, or anywhere in the 11222 zip code, we’re already familiar with your building type — the late-Victorian and Edwardian rowhouses built between 1885 and 1925 that dominate this neighborhood. These weren’t built for modern heating systems. They were built for coal, jury-rigged for oil in the 1950s, and now many are being reactivated as wood-burning fireplaces without proper relining. That three-fuel history creates cap and crown problems you won’t find in newer construction. Call (866) 884-9512 for a free estimate — Robert will walk your roof himself and tell you exactly what’s failing.

We’ve been climbing Greenpoint’s narrow alley-load rowhouses for 17 years. The tight clearances between buildings, the single-side ladder access, the salt-laden air rolling off the East River and Newtown Creek — these aren’t obstacles for us, they’re the baseline conditions we plan for on every job. Our Chimney Cap & Crown team doesn’t subcontract to anonymous crews. Robert Garcia, the owner, is the lead technician on your job site.
Why Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York Is Greenpoint’s Preferred Chimney Cap & Crown Company
Greenpoint homeowners have left us 1,096 verified reviews averaging 4.7 stars — and a significant share of those come from repeat customers in the 11222 zip code who’ve watched us solve problems other companies misdiagnosed. We’re not a franchise dispatching rotating crews from a central warehouse. Robert Garcia has spent 17 consecutive years on New York City roofs, and he personally handles the measurements, material selection, and installation on cap and crown jobs in Greenpoint.
Our response time to Greenpoint is typically 24–48 hours for standard cap and crown assessments, and we maintain same-week availability for active water infiltration or exposed flue conditions. We know which blocks have the tightest alley access, where to stage equipment on McGuinness Boulevard without blocking bike lanes, and how to navigate DOB compliance for multi-family rowhouses that serve three units from a single chimney stack. That local fluency saves you time and prevents the callbacks we see from out-of-borough contractors who treat Greenpoint like generic Brooklyn.
We’ve worked with professional-grade materials from DuraFlex, HeatShield, Gelco, and Olympia Chimney for years — the same product lines specified by commercial masonry contractors. For Greenpoint’s specific conditions, we typically specify stainless steel multi-flue caps and crown coatings formulated for high-salinity environments, not the galvanized hardware-store caps that rust through in three seasons near the waterfront.
Our Chimney Cap & Crown Services in Greenpoint
Custom Cap Fabrication & Installation
Greenpoint’s rowhouses weren’t built to standard dimensions. The chimney flues on these 1880s–1920s buildings vary in width, pitch, and exposure, and many have been modified multiple times as heating systems changed from coal to oil to gas. A stock cap from a big-box supplier won’t seat properly on these irregular crowns, and an improper seal channels rainwater directly into the flue chase.
We measure every Greenpoint chimney in person — Robert climbs with a tape measure and notes crown pitch, flue projection height, and surrounding masonry condition. Our custom caps are fabricated from 24-gauge stainless steel or copper, with screened sides sized to your flue diameter and a lid profile that sheds water away from the crown edge. On a recent job near the corner of Manhattan Avenue and Greenpoint Avenue, we built a custom cap for a two-family rowhouse where the original flue had been widened for a 1960s oil burner, then partially rebuilt for a gas insert. The off-the-shelf cap the previous owner installed left a 3-inch gap that had been dumping water into the chase for eight years.
Multi-Flue Cap Systems
Three-family rowhouses are standard in Greenpoint, and many share a single chimney stack with separate flues for each unit’s heating appliance or fireplace. Standard single-flue caps don’t address the cross-drafting and carbon monoxide migration risks these configurations create.
On Calyer Street off McGuinness Boulevard, we replaced a multi-flue cap on a three-family row house where the two active flues had never been separated by a proper flue liner — the original clay tiles were glazed with decades of oil soot and mixed creosote. We installed a custom Stainless Steel Multi-Flue Cap from Olympia Chimney that sealed each flue independently, preventing downdraft and carbon monoxide migration between units. The landlord had been quoted a full chimney rebuild by another company; our cap and liner assessment saved him that expense while fixing the actual safety problem.
Multi-flue caps in Greenpoint typically run $580–$940 installed, depending on flue count, access complexity, and whether we need to rebuild portions of the crown to achieve a level mounting surface.
Crown Repair & Reconstruction
The chimney crown — the concrete or mortar slab that tops the masonry stack — is where Greenpoint’s waterfront location does its worst damage. Salt-laden humidity from the East River and Newtown Creek saturates the crown’s surface, and winter freeze-thaw cycles exploit every micro-crack. We’ve seen crowns that looked intact from street level completely delaminated underneath, with water channels running straight into the flue chase.
Our crown repair process starts with removal of all loose material down to sound concrete or masonry. We form a proper slope — minimum 2-inch overhang past the chimney face, with a drip edge that directs water away from the brickwork below. For Greenpoint’s high-salinity environment, we specify crown coatings from HeatShield or professional-grade polymer-modified cement that flex with thermal expansion rather than cracking again the first winter.

Full crown reconstruction on a Greenpoint rowhouse typically costs $680–$1,240, while targeted crack repair and coating runs $340–$520.
Crown Coating & Preventive Sealing
Not every degraded crown needs full reconstruction. If the structural slab is sound but the surface is porous, cracked, or beginning to spall, a professional crown coating can add 10–15 years of service life at roughly half the cost of rebuild.
We pressure-wash the crown surface to remove salt deposits and biological growth, then apply a breathable, elastomeric coating formulated for chimney exposure. The key specification for Greenpoint is vapor permeability — the coating must let moisture escape from the masonry below while blocking liquid water from above. Trapped moisture is what destroys crowns in freeze-thaw climates, and we’ve seen cheap sealers accelerate the damage they were supposed to prevent. Crown coating in Greenpoint runs $340–$520 for a typical rowhouse chimney.
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 Greenpoint
We install and work with professional-grade materials from DuraFlex, HeatShield, Gelco, Olympia Chimney, Famco, and Copperfield — the same brands specified by commercial masonry contractors and high-end residential builders. For Greenpoint’s specific conditions, we keep stainless steel multi-flue caps from Olympia Chimney and Famco in regional stock, which means faster turnaround on custom measurements and fewer delays waiting for fabrication. We don’t install galvanized or aluminum caps on waterfront chimneys — the salt air destroys them before the warranty expires. When Robert specifies materials for your Greenpoint job, he’s choosing based on 17 years of watching what fails and what endures on New York City roofs.
Common Chimney Cap & Crown Problems We See in Greenpoint Homes
- Salt-accelerated mortar erosion at the crown. Greenpoint’s position between the East River and Newtown Creek exposes chimney crowns to persistent salt-laden humidity that inland Brooklyn neighborhoods don’t experience. The salt crystals expand in masonry pores, and winter freeze-thaw cycles exploit the weakened matrix. Annual inspection catches this before the crown fails completely.
- Abandoned oil flues left open to the elements. Landlords who converted boilers from No. 2 fuel oil to gas in the last decade frequently abandoned the old flue without decommissioning. Rain and debris bypass a damaged or missing cap, accelerating liner deterioration and creating masonry heave as saturated brick freezes. We find this on roughly one in three Greenpoint multi-family inspections.
- Improper cap sizing on modified flues. The coal-to-oil conversion era often involved crude flue widening or partial rebuilds that left irregular crown surfaces. Standard caps can’t achieve a proper seal, and the resulting gaps channel water directly into the chase. Custom fabrication is the only durable solution.
- Tight-access installation challenges. Alley-load rowhouses with single-side access block standard ladder setups and force articulating boom lift positioning. A missed seal on the cap gasket under these constrained conditions can vent combustion gases back into the parlor fireplace — a safety failure we’ve corrected on multiple Greenpoint jobs where previous installers cut corners.
Pricing for Chimney Cap & Crown in Greenpoint, NY
| Service | Typical Range in Greenpoint |
|---|---|
| Standard single-flue cap replacement | $340–$520 |
| Custom cap fabrication & installation | $480–$780 |
| Multi-flue cap system (2–3 flues) | $580–$940 |
| Crown crack repair & coating | $340–$520 |
| Full crown reconstruction | $680–$1,240 |
What moves you within these ranges? Crown size and accessibility are the biggest factors — a three-flue stack on a three-family rowhouse with alley-only access takes longer and requires different equipment than a single flue reachable from a standard ladder. Material choice matters too: copper caps cost more than stainless but develop a patina that matches Greenpoint’s historic brickwork. The condition of existing masonry underneath the crown determines whether we can coat or must rebuild. We don’t quote by phone for cap and crown work — Robert needs to see the actual crown pitch, flue projection, and surrounding masonry to specify the right solution. Estimates are free, and we’ll show you photos of what we’re seeing while we’re on your roof. Call (866) 884-9512 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Greenpoint
We handle chimney cap and crown work across northern Brooklyn and western Queens, including Long Island City just across the Pulaski Bridge, Williamsburg to the south along the BQE corridor, Gramercy Park in Manhattan for clients with multiple properties, and Sunnyside in Queens where the housing stock and chimney configurations share similarities with Greenpoint’s pre-war density. Response times vary by bridge and tunnel access, but Greenpoint remains our most frequent destination given the concentration of century-old chimneys needing specialized attention.
Serving Greenpoint, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Greenpoint 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 Cap & Crown in Greenpoint
Standard caps are built for modern, uniform flue dimensions and level crowns, and Greenpoint’s 1880s–1920s rowhouses rarely have either. The coal-to-oil conversion era modified flue widths and crown pitches irregularly, and the original masonry was never intended for today’s heating appliances. A custom cap measured to your actual chimney geometry is the only way to achieve a sealed, durable installation that won’t channel water into the chase. Call (866) 884-9512 and Robert will measure your flue in person — estimates are free.
Yes, significantly. The three-fuel history means your chimney likely has unlined or compromised clay tile, mixed creosote and oil-soot deposits, and possibly abandoned flues that were never properly decommissioned. A cap prevents rainwater from accelerating liner deterioration and keeps debris from blocking active flues, but the underlying liner condition may need separate assessment. We frequently find that Greenpoint landlords who abandoned oil flues without relining have created dangerous cross-connections between units. The cap is critical protection, but it’s one component of a system that may need broader attention.
Greenpoint’s position between two waterways creates a microclimate of elevated salt-laden humidity that accelerates mortar joint erosion and brick spalling faster than in inland Brooklyn neighborhoods. Salt crystals penetrate masonry pores, expand with moisture cycling, and weaken the crown’s structural matrix. Winter freeze-thaw then exploits these compromised areas, causing delamination and cracking that looks sudden but has been developing for years. Annual inspection is especially critical for exposed stacks on older rowhouses in this environment.
Yes — multi-flue cap systems are specifically designed for this configuration. Each flue is capped and screened independently from a shared mounting frame, so installation on one flue doesn’t affect the others. We coordinate with building owners or managing agents to schedule during convenient windows, and our equipment staging on McGuinness Boulevard or side streets is planned to minimize sidewalk and entryway obstruction. For (866) 884-9512 three-family buildings with separate unit access, we can often complete the work without entering individual apartments at all.
Cap displacement due to crown deterioration beneath the mounting surface. The original crowns on these buildings were often built with soft, porous mortar mixes that weren’t designed to withstand a century of freeze-thaw cycling. The cap itself — even a quality stainless unit — can’t maintain seal integrity when the substrate it’s mounted to is crumbling. We see this more in Greenpoint than in newer neighborhoods because the housing stock is older and the waterfront salt exposure accelerates the underlying damage. The fix requires crown repair or reconstruction before the cap can be properly reinstalled.
Written by Robert Garcia, Owner at Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York, serving Greenpoint and New York City since 2008.