Fast, Reliable Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Across Middle Village
Chimney cleaning and sweeping in Middle Village typically runs $180–$340 for a standard Level 1 inspection and sweep, with most appointments completed in 60–90 minutes. We schedule Middle Village homeowners within 1–3 business days, and emergency creosote blockages or backdrafting issues often same-day. Call (866) 884-9512 for a free estimate.

We’ve worked the brick semis and attached rows of Middle Village for 17 years — from the blocks off Metropolitan Avenue to the streets ringing Juniper Valley Park. Robert Garcia, our owner, still climbs the ladder himself. He knows the 1920s–1950s housing stock here like his own toolbox: original masonry chimneys with shared party-wall stacks, multi-flue configurations serving both fireplace and boiler, and the particular damage pattern that Queens’ freeze-thaw cycles inflict on aging lime-mortar crowns. When you’re dealing with a pre-war brick stack on 79th Street or a converted oil-to-gas flue near the Maspeth border, you want the person making decisions standing on your roof, not a subcontractor reading from a dispatch sheet.
Parking’s tight, alleys are narrow, and many Middle Village homes have alley-load access or side entrances that require coordination. We’re used to it. Our van carries the full equipment load — rotary whips, HEPA vacuums, video inspection rigs — so we’re not making multiple trips or asking you to reserve street space for hours.
Why Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York Is Middle Village’s Preferred Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Company
Our Chimney Cleaning & Sweep team has built its Middle Village reputation one flue at a time. Robert Garcia handles the work personally — he’s the lead technician on every job, not a dispatched crew you meet for the first time at your door. That matters when you’re letting someone onto your roof or into your basement to inspect a shared stack that serves your neighbor’s heating system too.
We’re trusted by 1,096+ homeowners across Greater New York, with reviews averaging 4.7 stars. Middle Village customers specifically mention our familiarity with oil-to-gas conversion flues and our patience explaining multi-flue stack complications — the kind of nuance you don’t get from a generalist handyman or franchise crew rotating through Queens on a territory map.
Response time to Middle Village averages 24–48 hours for standard sweeps, and we prioritize calls from the 11379 zip for same-day service when there’s active smoke backup, carbon monoxide concern, or visible spalling on the crown after a freeze. We know which blocks have the tightest alley clearances, where Juniper Valley Park’s oak canopy drops the heaviest leaf load, and which building era typically has the 8×8 vs. 8×12 flue configurations. That local fluency saves time and prevents callbacks.
Our Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Services in Middle Village
Level 1 Inspection
A Level 1 inspection in Middle Village means Robert examines the readily accessible portions of your chimney structure and flue — the crown, cap, firebox, and damper — without demolition or specialized tools. For the neighborhood’s characteristic 1925–1955 brick semis with original masonry, this baseline check identifies obvious creosote buildup, crown cracks, and cap deterioration. We document everything with photos you can reference for insurance or co-op board requirements. Most Middle Village homeowners schedule this annually as preventive maintenance, especially if you’re burning wood or gas in a fireplace that shares a party-wall stack with your heating appliance.
Level 2 Inspection
Level 2 is where our Middle Village expertise pays off most dramatically. This camera-assisted internal inspection is mandatory after any oil-to-gas conversion, property sale, or significant weather event — and it’s the service we perform most often in this neighborhood. Robert runs a video scope the full length of your flue, documenting clay tile condition, liner integrity, and any gaps or misalignments. In Middle Village, roughly 60% of pre-1960 brick semis used oil heat; NYC’s aggressive phase-out of #2 and #4 heating oil has triggered rapid conversions throughout the neighborhood, leaving scores of chimneys with clay tile flues sized and lined for 600°F oil exhaust now venting cooler, moisture-heavy gas combustion at 200°F. That temperature mismatch accelerates acidic condensation, liner cracking, and carbon monoxide risk that suburban markets around NYC converted away from years ago. Our Level 2 catches this damage before it becomes a health hazard.
Last month we swept a 1939 brick semi on 79th Street near Juniper Valley Park where the homeowner converted from oil to gas three years ago. Our Level 2 inspection with a DuraFlex liner camera revealed a hairline crack in the old clay tile — typical flue-size mismatch damage — and we installed a HeatShield liner to prevent CO seepage into the adjacent cold-oil flue, which was backdrafting into the living room.
Creosote Removal
Middle Village’s dense tree canopy, particularly the mature oaks and maples surrounding Juniper Valley Park, creates a debris environment that accelerates creosote formation. Leaves, twigs, and organic matter accumulate on chimney caps and in flue tops, restricting draft and causing incomplete combustion. When smoke lingers instead of exiting cleanly, creosote deposits thicken rapidly — especially on north-facing stacks that stay cooler and damper through winter. Our rotary sweep system breaks glazed creosote (Stage 3) without damaging original clay liners, and we finish with a HEPA vacuum containment that keeps soot out of your living space. For homeowners on blocks like 69th Road who use their fireplaces only seasonally, that debris-plus-creosote combination is the hidden risk between annual sweeps.

Soot Removal & Annual Sweep
The standard annual sweep removes soot, light creosote, and obstructive debris before heating season begins. In Middle Village, we schedule these heavily in September and October — before the first hard freeze that opens mortar joints and before homeowners start lighting fires regularly. Our annual sweep includes a basic operational check of your damper and firebox, plus documentation of any crown or cap issues that need addressing before winter. For gas fireplace users, we verify that conversion flues are drafting properly and that no backdraft pressure is pulling exhaust into dormant adjacent flues — a pattern we see regularly where oil-to-gas conversions happened within the last five years.
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 Middle Village
We install and work with professional-grade materials from DuraFlex, HeatShield, and Famco — the same product lines commercial contractors specify for Queens multi-family and co-op buildings. For Middle Village homeowners, this means we don’t order parts from a catalog and hope they fit your 1930s flue configuration. Robert stocks common liner diameters, crown-forming compounds, and cap sizes matched to the neighborhood’s typical 8×8 and 8×12 clay flue tiles. When we find damage during your sweep, we can often repair it same-visit rather than scheduling a return trip that leaves you with a compromised chimney. HeatShield’s cerfractory resurfacing system, for instance, lets us restore cracked clay flues in Middle Village’s older stacks without a full liner tear-out — a significant cost and time savings on pre-war construction.
Common Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Problems We See in Middle Village Homes
- Backdrafting from capped, dormant oil flues after gas conversions. After an oil-to-gas conversion, the old oil-boiler flue inside the same chimney stack is often simply capped and left cold — but that dormant, uninsulated flue acts as a pressure sink, pulling air down and causing backdrafting in the adjacent active fireplace or gas flue. Chimney techs working the Middle Village/Maspeth border encounter this two-flue backdraft pattern regularly in homes where the conversion happened within the last five years.
- Frozen lime-mortar crowns spalling during Queens’ freeze-thaw cycles. Water seeps through open joints in aging crowns, freezes, expands, and destroys liners from the outside in. North-facing stacks on Middle Village’s older semis suffer worst — they’re slower to dry and experience more freeze cycles per winter than south-facing exposures.
- Debris-clogged flues from Juniper Valley Park tree canopy. Leaves and twigs pile on chimney tops on surrounding residential blocks, causing blockages missed by homeowners who use their fireplaces only seasonally. A flue that looks clear from below can be choked at the cap by October’s leaf drop.
- Shared party-wall stack access complications. Middle Village’s multi-flue, multi-owner configurations serving adjacent units simultaneously require careful NYC DOB permit coordination and neighbor notification — a complexity suburban single-family markets simply don’t face.
Pricing for Chimney Cleaning & Sweep in Middle Village, NY
| Service | Typical Range in Middle Village |
|---|---|
| Level 1 Inspection + Standard Sweep | $180 – $260 |
| Level 2 Inspection (video scope) | $280 – $340 |
| Creosote Removal (heavy/glazed buildup) | $220 – $320 |
| Annual Maintenance Sweep (returning customer) | $160 – $220 |
| Fireplace Cleaning (gas insert) | $140 – $200 |
What moves you within these ranges: flue height and accessibility (three-story semis near Metropolitan Avenue run higher than two-story rows), severity of creosote buildup, whether your stack requires rooftop ladder work or interior access through a shared basement, and whether we find damage requiring immediate documentation for insurance or co-op board submission. Oil-to-gas conversion inspections often land at the higher end because of the additional flue-camera time and pressure-differential testing. We quote upfront before starting work — no open-ended billing. Call (866) 884-9512 for an exact quote; estimates are free and Robert will walk you through what your specific Middle Village home likely needs based on construction era and heating history.
We Also Serve Cities Near Middle Village
Our service radius covers the full chimney cleaning and sweep needs of Maspeth (where we frequently address the same oil-to-gas conversion patterns along the border), Rego Park (co-op and garden apartment chimney maintenance), Elmhurst (mixed-era housing stock with diverse flue configurations), and Glendale (similar pre-war semi-detached construction with shared stack issues). If you’re unsure whether your address falls within our standard Middle Village scheduling zone, call and we’ll confirm — we often route same-day calls across these adjacent neighborhoods when proximity allows.
Serving Middle Village, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Middle Village 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 Cleaning & Sweep in Middle Village
Backdrafting after oil-to-gas conversion is almost always caused by a pressure imbalance between your active gas flue and the adjacent capped, dormant oil flue in the same party-wall stack. The cold, empty oil flue acts as a pressure sink, pulling air downward and forcing exhaust back into your living space through the active flue. This is a known hazard in Middle Village’s pre-1960 semis where conversions were completed without proper liner resizing or insulation. Call (866) 884-9512 — we test pressure differentials and install proper liners to eliminate the backdraft.
The dense oak and maple canopy surrounding Juniper Valley Park drops significant leaf and twig debris onto chimney caps and into flue openings, particularly on blocks like 69th Road and 79th Street. This debris restricts draft, traps moisture, and accelerates creosote formation — especially for homeowners who use fireplaces only seasonally and don’t notice the blockage until lighting the first fire. Our sweeps include cap and crown debris removal, and we recommend spark-arrestor caps with proper mesh sizing for homes under the heaviest canopy cover.
Yes — any structural work, liner installation, or crown rebuild on a shared party-wall stack in Middle Village requires NYC Department of Buildings permitting and often neighbor notification, since the stack serves multiple units. Simple cleaning and Level 1/2 inspections typically don’t require permits, but we document findings in a format that streamlines permit application if repairs are needed. Robert coordinates directly with homeowners on the notification process; we’ve handled this paperwork on dozens of Middle Village semis and know the 11379 zip’s local DOB inspector preferences.
Spalling brick on your crown is urgent if water is actively entering the stack, which happens once freeze-thaw cycles open mortar joints wide enough for visible gaps. In Middle Village, Queens’ repeated winter freeze-thaw attacks mean a cracked crown in November becomes a saturated, liner-destroying leak by February. We prioritize crown assessments during fall sweeps — a $200–$400 crown seal or partial rebuild now prevents $2,000+ liner replacement later. Call for inspection if you see brick fragments on your roof or patio, or if your firebox shows water staining.
Even occasional fireplace use in Middle Village warrants annual sweeping because debris accumulation from the neighborhood’s dense tree canopy and the potential for dormant heating-appliance flue issues create risks independent of burn frequency. The NFPA 211 standard recommends annual inspection for all chimneys; for Middle Village’s specific conditions, we add that gas fireplace users should verify conversion-flue integrity yearly, and wood-burning users with light use still need creosote monitoring. Schedule before October’s leaf drop and first freeze — call (866) 884-9512 to book your annual sweep.
Written by Robert Garcia, Owner at Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York, serving Middle Village and Greater New York since 2008.