Fast, Reliable Chimney Cap & Crown Across Gladstone
Chimney cap and crown repair in Gladstone, Oregon typically costs $280–$650 for most jobs, and our Chimney Cap & Crown team can usually diagnose and quote same-day. We’re familiar with the river-bottom neighborhoods along the Clackamas and Willamette confluence — from the older ranches near Gladstone City Park to the bungalows off Portland Avenue — where persistent dampness and freeze-thaw cycling destroy standard crowns faster than almost anywhere in Clackamas County. James Wilson has been the lead technician on chimney repairs in this microclimate for 17 years, and we carry the heavy-duty materials needed to fix Gladstone’s moisture-compromised stacks in one trip. Call (866) 541-8697.

Why Horizon Chimney Sweep Washington Is Gladstone’s Preferred Chimney Cap & Crown Company
We’ve built our reputation in Gladstone one 97027 address at a time. Our 1,006 verified customer reviews averaging 4.8 stars include dozens from Gladstone homeowners who found us after generalist contractors failed to solve recurring crown cracks or installed caps that rusted out within two seasons.
James Wilson arrives as the lead technician, not a subcontractor learning your chimney on the fly. That matters in Gladstone, where a proper inspection means climbing down to check below the roofline — not just glancing at the cap from a ladder. The river-bottom humidity here teaches you to look lower.
We stock DuraFlex multi-flue caps, HeatShield crown coating, and Famco hardware specifically for the wet Willamette Valley climate, so most Gladstone jobs don’t wait on parts. From Jennings Lodge across the river to the Oak Grove border, we typically schedule within 48 hours.
Our Chimney Cap & Crown Services in Gladstone
Cap Installation
New cap installation in Gladstone runs $280–$450 for standard single-flue models, $420–$650 for multi-flue or custom-fit units. We size for your flue count and draft requirements, not just roof aesthetics. In Gladstone’s chronic humidity, we specify powder-coated or stainless options over standard galvanized — we’ve pulled too many rusted-through galvanized caps out of unlined flues near the Clackamas River bottom. A proper cap here isn’t decoration; it’s the primary defense against moisture entering a system already stressed by ground humidity.
Cap Replacement
Cap replacement in Gladstone often reveals deeper problems: rust flakes obstructing the flue, deteriorated mortar from years of trapped moisture, or spalled crown edges that the old cap was hiding. We charge $320–$580 for replacement with inspection and basic flue cleaning, more if the crown beneath needs repair. Most Gladstone replacements we do are on 1960s ranches near River Road or older homes off Arlington Street — properties where the original cap was never adequate for this environment.
Crown Repair
Concrete crown repair in Gladstone typically costs $380–$620. The standard poured-concrete crown in this city fails predictably: river-valley moisture penetrates hairline cracks, freezes in January cold snaps, and spalls the surface within two winters. We’ve learned to specify sloped crowns with proper overhang and drip edges, then seal with flexible coating. On a 1950s ranch near the Clackamas River bottom, we replaced a cracked concrete crown and added a DuraFlex multi-flue cap. The old crown had spalled from freeze-thaw cycling in the damp river fog, and ground moisture had wicked up the brick stack, requiring us to repoint the lowest courses before sealing the crown with HeatShield coating.
Crown Coating
Crown coating — our most requested Gladstone service — runs $340–$520 depending on crown size and prep work. We apply HeatShield elastomeric coating, which flexes through freeze-thaw cycles instead of cracking like rigid concrete. For Gladstone’s older masonry chimneys, this is often the difference between a five-year fix and a fifteen-year one. We won’t coat over active spalling or structural cracks; we’ll tell you straight if the crown needs rebuild instead. That honesty is why Gladstone homeowners call us back for annual service.

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 Gladstone
We install and repair with DuraFlex multi-flue caps, HeatShield crown coating systems, and Famco venting hardware — brands that hold up in the Willamette Valley’s wet heating season. For Gladstone’s river-bottom homes with unlined flues or marginal draft, we specify Olympia Chimney components when liner integration is part of the cap project. We keep common Gladstone sizes in stock: 13×13 and 13×17 for the area’s typical clay flue tiles, plus adjustable multi-flue units for the wider chimneys common on 1950s ranches. No waiting two weeks for a parts order from back east.
Common Chimney Cap & Crown Problems We See in Gladstone Homes
- Mortar crown spalls within two seasons because persistent river-valley moisture and freeze-thaw cycling exceed the design life of standard concrete crowns. We see this most on homes near the confluence, where fog sits heavier and longer than in hillside West Linn.
- Ground moisture wicks up through unlined brick stacks in low-lying neighborhoods near the confluence, causing efflorescence and mortar washout below the roofline that goes undetected if only the cap is inspected. A proper Gladstone inspection always includes the lower courses.
- Standard galvanized caps rust quickly in the chronic river-bottom humidity, leading to flue obstructions from rust flakes and accelerating creosote buildup in unlined flues. We replace these with stainless or powder-coated units rated for marine-adjacent exposure.
- Original crowns on 1940s–1970s bungalows lack proper slope or overhang, directing water into the brick rather than away from it. In Gladstone’s wet climate, this design flaw becomes destructive fast.
Pricing for Chimney Cap & Crown in Gladstone, OR
| Service | Typical Range in Gladstone |
|---|---|
| Single-flue cap installation | $280–$450 |
| Multi-flue cap installation | $420–$650 |
| Cap replacement with inspection | $320–$580 |
| Crown repair (partial rebuild) | $380–$620 |
| Crown coating (HeatShield) | $340–$520 |
| Custom cap or extensive crown rebuild | $650–$950 |
Three factors push Gladstone jobs toward the higher end: crown size (older homes often have oversized chimneys), accessibility (steep roofs or tight river-bottom lots), and hidden moisture damage requiring repointing below the roofline. We quote upfront after inspection — no open-ended billing. Estimates are free; call (866) 541-8697 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Gladstone
We regularly cross the river to Jennings Lodge, work the hillside streets of Oatfield, and handle cap and crown jobs throughout Oak Grove and West Linn. The same river-valley moisture patterns affect chimneys across this whole confluence area, so the expertise we bring to Gladstone applies directly to your neighbors’ homes too.
Serving Gladstone, OR — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Gladstone 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 Gladstone
Gladstone’s position at the Clackamas-Willamette confluence creates a persistently damp microclimate with heavier fog and more freeze-thaw cycles than hillside locations. Standard concrete crowns absorb this moisture, expand when frozen, and spall within two seasons — a failure rate we don’t see at the same frequency in drier, better-drained West Linn neighborhoods. Crown coating with flexible sealant or full rebuild with proper slope and overhang prevents this. Call (866) 541-8697 for an inspection — estimates are free.
Yes, river-bottom homes in Gladstone benefit from stainless steel or powder-coated caps rather than standard galvanized, which rusts quickly in chronic humidity. We also recommend multi-flue caps with adequate screen height to prevent creosote bridging, because unlined flues in this area condense more moisture and build creosote faster. For a 1950s ranch near the river, we’d typically specify DuraFlex or Famco stainless hardware. Call (866) 541-8697 and we’ll match the cap to your exact exposure.
Yes, we cap unlined flues regularly in Gladstone’s older housing stock, but we inspect for draft adequacy and flue integrity first. An unlined flue with a cap that fits too tightly can create smoke backup; one that’s too loose lets in rain that accelerates mortar deterioration in an already moisture-stressed system. We size caps specifically for unlined dimensions and often recommend liner evaluation as part of the project. Call (866) 541-8697 to discuss your bungalow’s flue.
Crown coating involves cleaning the existing crown, repairing minor cracks, then applying a flexible elastomeric layer — we use HeatShield — that expands and contracts through freeze-thaw cycles without cracking. Gladstone houses need this because rigid concrete crowns fail predictably here; the coating adds waterproofing and flexibility that standard concrete lacks. Most coatings last 10–15 years with annual inspection. Call (866) 541-8697 for pricing on your crown — estimates are free.
That white powder is efflorescence — mineral salts left when moisture evaporates from masonry. In Gladstone, it’s typically caused by ground moisture wicking up unlined brick stacks in river-bottom neighborhoods, not directly by a failed cap or crown. However, a missing or leaking cap accelerates the problem by adding rainwater to the moisture load. We inspect below the roofline to distinguish ground-source from crown-source moisture and recommend the right fix. Call (866) 541-8697 — we’ll diagnose it in person.
Written by James Wilson, Owner at Horizon Chimney Sweep Washington, serving Gladstone and the Willamette Valley confluence area since 2007.