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CHIMNEY FOR DALLASMASTER CRAFTSMAN & SERVICE

Fort Worth, TX · Tarrant County

Fort Worth Chimney Sweep, Repair & Inspection

From the century-old brick chimneys of Fairmount and Ryan Place to the prefab units going up near Lake Worth and far south Fort Worth, we service the full range of chimney construction this city has to offer.

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Fort Worth doesn’t build like Dallas, and it doesn’t age like Dallas either. Cowtown grew outward in waves, so a chimney crew working here needs to know the difference between the load-bearing masonry stacks common in near-downtown neighborhoods and the metal prefab chase systems that showed up in subdivisions decades later. We’ve worked both, and we don’t treat a 1915 Craftsman the same way we treat a 1998 build off I-20.

Our team covers chimney sweep, inspection, and repair work across Tarrant County, but Fort Worth is where we spend the most time because the housing stock here demands it. Elizabeth Boulevard and Mistletoe Heights alone have enough original masonry chimneys to keep a mason busy full time, and that’s before you count the mid-century ranch homes stretching toward Benbrook and the newer construction pushing west past Lake Worth.

Why Fort Worth Chimneys Need Different Care

Tarrant County sits on the same expansive clay that causes foundation headaches across North Texas, and chimneys feel it first because they’re often the heaviest single point of masonry attached to a house. When that clay swells after rain and shrinks in a dry summer, a chimney’s footing can shift independently of the rest of the structure. We see the result as a visible lean, a widening gap where the chimney meets the exterior wall, or cracked flashing that starts leaking long before anyone notices a structural issue.

Add in Tarrant County’s hail history and the freeze-thaw cycles that hit every winter, and brick joints that were fine five years ago start failing. In Fairmount and Ryan Place, where a lot of the original lime mortar and soft brick from the early 1900s is still in place, that combination is rougher on the masonry than it is on newer Portland-cement construction. We’ve pulled damaged crowns and spalled brick off homes on Fairmount’s tree-lined streets that had never been touched since the house was built, which is exactly how a small crack turns into a rebuild.

Chimney services in Fort Worth

Whatever era your Fort Worth home falls into, from Elizabeth Boulevard brick to a far-west-side build, these are the services we run most often across the city.

Original lime mortar joints on pre-1930s Fairmount and Ryan Place homes
Footing movement from Blackland clay shifting under older masonry stacks
Hail-damaged crowns and flashing after Tarrant County storm seasons
Spalled or crumbling brick on Elizabeth Boulevard and Mistletoe Heights chimneys
Prefab chase and cap condition on mid-century homes near Benbrook and Lake Worth
Draft and liner issues in newer far-west and far-south Fort Worth construction

Popular services here

Nearby areas we serve

Frequently asked questions

Do you work on the historic homes in Fairmount and Ryan Place?

Yes, that’s a large part of what we do. Those neighborhoods have original masonry chimneys with lime-based mortar that needs different repointing techniques than modern cement mortar, and we match materials so repairs don’t stand out against the original brick.

Why does my chimney lean or pull away from the house?

It’s usually footing movement from the expansive clay soil under North Texas homes. The chimney’s foundation shifts independently from the house foundation, which opens a gap at the wall line. We inspect the footing before recommending a fix so we’re not just patching the visible crack.

How often should a Fort Worth chimney be inspected?

Once a year, ideally before winter, since Tarrant County’s hail seasons and freeze-thaw cycles both take a toll on brick and crowns. Homes in older neighborhoods with original masonry benefit from more frequent checks given the age of the materials.