We work on chimneys all over Denton, from the historic homes ringing the Square and the university corridor to the newer subdivisions filling in off Loop 288 and US-380. As the Denton County seat and home to both UNT and Texas Woman’s University, Denton has a housing mix you don’t see in the smaller bedroom suburbs closer to Dallas: real early-1900s masonry, high-turnover student rentals, and master-planned developments that are barely twenty years old, sometimes within a couple miles of each other.
That mix changes what a chimney actually needs. A bungalow in the West Oak Area or Bell Avenue district might have original mortar that’s outlasted three or four roofs. A rental near Fry Street or Carroll Boulevard might not have been swept since the last owner lived there, because tenants change every lease and nobody thinks to call. A newer house in Savannah or Rayzor Ranch just needs its first real inspection before anyone lights a fire in it. We see all three within the same week, most weeks.
Why Denton Chimneys Take a Different Kind of Wear
Denton sits on the same expansive clay soils as the rest of North Texas, and that clay swells and shrinks with every wet spring and dry summer, cracking crowns and shifting flashing on chimneys of any age. But Denton adds its own wrinkle: it’s the oldest, most established city in this part of the metro, so a bigger share of our calls involve masonry going back to the early 1900s. Homes in districts like Oak-Hickory, West Oak Area, and the West Denton Residential Historic District near downtown were built with old-style lime mortar that doesn’t drain or move the way modern materials do, and freeze-thaw cycling through the winter finds every joint that’s started to give.
Then there’s the rental factor that’s specific to a college town. With UNT and TWU both here, Denton has thousands of houses that get re-rented year after year to new tenants, and the chimney is usually the last thing anyone checks before move-in. We regularly find nests, heavy creosote, and cracked crowns in these properties that a long-term owner would have caught years earlier. Out in the newer growth, Robson Ranch, Savannah, and Rayzor Ranch, chimneys are structurally sound but often haven’t had a first real inspection, and Denton County’s severe spring hail, sometimes two inches or larger, doesn’t spare new construction just because it’s new.
Chimney services in Denton
Here’s what we’re called out for most often in Denton, whether it’s a landlord turning over a rental near campus, a homeowner maintaining a century-old chimney near the Square, or a newer house out in Rayzor Ranch getting its very first chimney inspection before winter.
Popular services here
Nearby areas we serve
Frequently asked questions
Do you service rental properties near UNT and TWU?
Yes, we work with landlords and property managers throughout Denton’s rental corridor near Fry Street and Carroll Boulevard. We can schedule sweeps and inspections between leases so a new tenant isn’t inheriting years of neglect or an unnoticed nest.
Are the older homes near the Square harder to repair than newer construction?
Often, yes. Homes in districts like Oak-Hickory and West Oak Area typically have original lime-based mortar that behaves differently than modern mixes, so tuckpointing has to match the original material, not just patch over it.
How often should a newer home in Rayzor Ranch or Robson Ranch get inspected?
We recommend an annual Level 1 inspection even on new construction, especially given how often Denton County sees damaging spring hail. New chimneys can still develop crown cracks or flashing problems as the house settles.
Do you handle animal removal from chimneys in Denton?
Regularly. It shows up in older homes near downtown with wider original flues, and in rental properties near the universities where a cap went missing or damaged for a while before anyone reported it.