Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Cottage Lake
Chimney liner replacement and rebuilds in Cottage Lake typically run $2,800–$7,500 depending on whether we’re relining a factory-built unit or rebuilding masonry from the crown down, and most jobs along NE Woodinville-Duvall Road and the 98077 ZIP are scheduled within 48 hours. We’ve been pulling apart chimneys in this community since 2008 — long enough to know which 1980s zero-clearance fireplaces off NE 148th St have obsolete flue components that can’t be sourced anymore, and which masonry stacks near the lake are suffering from the same moisture cycling we see every winter. If your chimney is smoking into the room, showing rust stains on the exterior, or you’ve been told you need a liner but got a vague quote, call us at (866) 541-8697. James Wilson will walk the job with you personally.

Why Horizon Chimney Sweep Washington Is Cottage Lake’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
We’ve earned our reputation in Cottage Lake one flue at a time. Our 1,006 verified customer reviews averaging 4.8 stars include dozens from homeowners right here in the 98077 ZIP — many of whom found us after a generalist contractor couldn’t diagnose why their “repaired” chimney was still leaking condensation into the firebox. When James Wilson arrives at your door, you’re getting 17 years of chimney-exclusive diagnostic experience, not a subcontractor learning on your dime.
Our response time to Cottage Lake averages same-day or next-day during peak season because we’re routing from our Seattle base up SR-522 and cutting across NE Woodinville-Duvall Road — not dispatching from Kent or Tacoma like some competitors. We know the local terrain: which properties sit in the fog pocket off the lake, which lots have 80-foot Douglas firs directly overhanging the roofline, and how that combination accelerates the exact failure modes we’re called to fix. That local pattern recognition means faster, more accurate quotes and fewer return trips.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team carries DuraFlex and HeatShield inventory sized for the factory-built fireplaces common in Cottage Lake’s 1970s–1990s housing stock, so we’re not ordering parts and making you wait two weeks. We’ve rebuilt chimneys on homes from the original 1974 plat near the lake shore to the 1989 builds off Avondale Road — we know the construction eras, the original equipment, and what fails first.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Cottage Lake
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
For masonry chimneys in Cottage Lake’s older homes — especially the 1975–1985 brick stacks near the lake — a stainless steel liner from Olympia Chimney or DuraFlex is often the only code-compliant path after the original clay flue tiles have cracked from freeze-thaw cycling. We size these precisely for your appliance, whether it’s a wood insert or a gas conversion, and we anchor them properly because Cottage Lake’s persistent dampness makes a sloppy installation fail fast. A properly installed stainless liner in this market runs $2,800–$4,200 for a standard single-flue masonry chimney.
Flexible Liner Systems
When your masonry chimney has offsets — common in the 1980s builds off NE 148th St where builders jogged flues around second-floor framing — a rigid stainless liner won’t make the turn. We use DuraFlex flexible liners with proper insulation blankets for zero-clearance installations, critical in Cottage Lake where shoulder-season burns produce condensation that pools in low spots. The flexibility also helps us navigate past the debris buildup we regularly find in chimneys beneath heavy fir canopy. Expect $3,200–$4,800 installed with proper top-sealing dampers.
Liner Replacement for Factory-Built Fireplaces
This is where Cottage Lake’s housing stock gets specific. The zero-clearance fireplaces installed from the late 1970s through the early 1990s — brands like Heatilator, Superior, and Marco — came with proprietary metal flue systems and refractory panels that are now obsolete. We’ve replaced dozens of these in Cottage Lake homes where the original manufacturer no longer exists and parts are unavailable. We handle the full scope: removing the damaged unit, installing a new listed liner system (often HeatShield or Gelco), and rebuilding the firebox with proper clearances. These jobs run $3,500–$5,500 depending on access and whether the chase cover needs replacement too.
Partial and Full Chimney Rebuild
We handled a full rebuild on a 1985 zero-clearance fireplace off NE 148th St near the lake. The old DuraFlex liner was corroded from years of damp shoulder-season burns with alder that was split but barely seasoned. We replaced it with a HeatShield stainless liner and rebuilt the refractory panels that had spalled from moisture cycling. That job was a partial rebuild — firebox and liner only, saving the chase structure. Full masonry rebuilds from the roofline up are necessary when the crown has failed completely and water has saturated the wythe, which we see on unlined 1970s brick chimneys that never had a proper cap. Partial rebuilds in Cottage Lake start around $4,500; full rebuilds range $6,500–$12,000 depending on height and scaffolding needs.
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 Cottage Lake
We don’t guess at material compatibility. For Cottage Lake’s moisture-stressed chimneys, we specify DuraFlex for flexible liner applications where offsets and condensation management matter, HeatShield for cerfractory resurfacing and stainless liner systems in factory-built rebuilds, and Famco for termination caps and custom chase covers that actually shed our heavy rainfall. We stock common diameters and fittings locally, so a Cottage Lake homeowner isn’t waiting two weeks for a specialty part while their fireplace sits unusable through another cold snap. When we quote your job, we’re quoting with real part numbers and real availability — not a placeholder price that balloons later.

Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Cottage Lake Homes
- Condensation corrosion in metal flues. Cottage Lake’s lake-adjacent humidity, combined with short, low-heat burns from under-seasoned alder or maple, creates persistent moisture inside metal flue liners. We’ve pulled DuraFlex liners off NE Woodinville-Duvall Road that looked ten years older than their actual install date because of this cycling.
- Organic debris blockages accelerating creosote accumulation. The Douglas fir and cedar canopy doesn’t just drop needles on your roof — it funnels them straight into uncapped flues. We regularly find flues in Cottage Lake that are 30–40% obstructed with compacted debris, which traps creosote against the liner wall and can lead to chimney fires or forced full rebuilds when the liner overheats and warps.
- Obsolete components in 1980s prefab fireplaces. The gaskets, refractory panels, and metal flue connectors for factory-built units from this era are largely discontinued. We can’t “repair” what we can’t source, which pushes many Cottage Lake homeowners toward full liner replacement with modern, listed systems that have available parts.
- Crown and mortar failure from moisture saturation. Masonry chimneys in the 98077 ZIP without proper crown overhang or waterproofing absorb lake-area humidity all fall and winter. By spring, spalling brick and eroded mortar joints have compromised the flue liner’s support structure, requiring partial or full rebuild to restore safe clearances.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Cottage Lake, WA
We’re straightforward about numbers because vague pricing wastes everyone’s time. In Cottage Lake’s market, here’s what we typically see:
| Service | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Stainless steel liner (masonry chimney, single flue) | $2,800 – $4,200 |
| Flexible liner with insulation (offset flue) | $3,200 – $4,800 |
| Factory-built fireplace liner replacement | $3,500 – $5,500 |
| Partial rebuild (firebox, liner, panels) | $4,500 – $6,500 |
| Full masonry rebuild (crown to roofline) | $6,500 – $12,000 |
What moves you within these ranges: chimney height and scaffolding requirements, whether we’re working with accessible chase covers or tearing into siding, the condition of existing refractory materials, and whether we discover hidden water damage once the unit is opened. We don’t upsell — we’ve walked away from full rebuilds when a targeted liner replacement was the honest fix. Every estimate is free, detailed, and delivered by James Wilson or a senior technician who can explain exactly what we’re seeing. Call (866) 541-8697 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Cottage Lake
Our chimney liner and rebuild crews work regularly in Woodinville, where the drier, more open terrain produces different creosote patterns than Cottage Lake’s lake-effect moisture; Maltby, with its own stock of 1970s–1980s rural builds; Duvall, where we see similar wooded-lot conditions; and Redmond, where newer construction shifts our work toward gas conversions and insert installations. Each market gets the same owner-led diagnosis, adjusted for local conditions.
Serving Cottage Lake, WA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Cottage Lake 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 Liner & Rebuild in Cottage Lake
Yes — compacted fir needles and cedar cones trap creosote against liner walls and can obstruct airflow enough to cause overheating, warping, or chimney fires that destroy metal flues. We see this exact scenario in Cottage Lake’s heavy canopy areas, where uncapped flues accumulate 30–40% debris blockage in a single season. A proper cap installation during your liner rebuild prevents recurrence. Call (866) 541-8697 for a free flue inspection.
Often yes, if the metal firebox wrapper and flue collar are structurally sound — we can replace refractory panels and install a listed liner system without removing the chase. However, some Cottage Lake homes have units where the original manufacturer is defunct and no replacement panels are listed, which requires a full factory-built replacement. James Wilson assesses this in person; estimates are free.
Significantly, if the wood isn’t seasoned to below 20% moisture content. Alder and big-leaf maple from Cottage Lake lots are often split and burned within 6–8 months, producing single-season creosote loads we consistently find 2–3x higher than homes burning kiln-dried fuel. That accelerated buildup corrodes metal liners faster and increases fire risk. We recommend a 12-month minimum seasoning period and annual inspection — call us to check your current liner condition.
It depends on how far water has traveled. If the crown crack is recent and the brick below is sound, we can rebuild the crown, seal the masonry, and install a stainless liner without touching the wythe. But in Cottage Lake’s damp microclimate, we’ve opened 1970s chimneys where moisture has saturated multiple courses — then a partial rebuild just delays the inevitable. We use video inspection to show you exactly what we’re seeing before you commit.
Yes — we install and repair Copperfield liner systems, caps, and components, and we encounter their hardware in 1990s Cottage Lake builds where original installers specified them. We stock common Copperfield fittings and can match their specifications for replacement liners or chase covers. If you’re unsure what’s in your chimney, we’ll identify it during our free estimate visit.
Written by James Wilson, Owner at Horizon Chimney Sweep Washington, serving Cottage Lake since 2008.