High Tech Chimney Sweeps

General ContractorVerified

About

High Tech Chimney Sweeps at 1134 First Street in Coronado provides chimney inspection, cleaning, and repair for the island's residential housing stock, much of which dates to the early-to-mid twentieth century and retains original masonry flues. Chimney-cap installation and crown-seal work protect the terra-cotta flue liners common in pre-1950 Coronado homes from water intrusion, a service that overlaps with the leak-detection scope of Pacific Perfection Roofing wherever the chimney stack penetrates the roofline. Dryer-vent cleaning rounds out the preventive-maintenance menu, addressing the lint-accumulation fire risk that the National Fire Protection Association's NFPA 211 standard classifies as a leading cause of residential structure fires. The First Street suite sits two blocks from Orange Avenue and within the 92118 core where Coronado Beach and Hotel Del Coronado generate the island's densest mix of single-family and vacation-rental properties. Combustion-air assessment and ventilation-system evaluation pair with the ductwork services at CleanWave Indoor Air Duct Solutions, covering the full airflow path from firebox to rooftop termination. Level II chimney inspections follow NFPA 211 protocol, utilizing video-scan technology to document flue-liner condition, mortar-joint integrity, and creosote accumulation depth before issuing a pass-or-repair assessment. Coronado Island's compact geography means every residential and commercial address in the 92118 ZIP sits within a short drive or walk of the Coronado Bridge approach, the Orange Avenue village core, and the Coronado Ferry Landing bayfront. Coronado Island's compact geography concentrates the firm's service territory within a single 92118 ZIP code, and homeowners reach the 1134 First Street office on foot or by bicycle through the flat village grid that connects Coronado Beach, Orange Avenue, and the Coronado Bridge approach. The island's year-round mild climate means fireplaces operate seasonally rather than continuously, but the salt-air environment accelerates mortar and cap deterioration even during non-burning months.