Click on a photo to enlarge.
Beautiful Crawl Space Insulation. The walls are insulated with SilverGlo foam board insulation. Then TerraBlock foam insulation is installed across the floor and spiked down, which insulates and adds durability to the crawl space. Finally, a heavy-duty crawl space encapsulation liner is installed permanently across the floor and sealed to the walls and floor. Resulting in much lower humidity, much warmer floors upstairs, and fewer drafts
Two part expanding spray foam is in-stalled on rim joist and over sill plate to seal all air leaks from the outside and insulate this important area of your home. Dr. Energy Saver’s spray foam has a high insulation value per inch, and because it expands, it seals all cracks and gaps and joints where air from the outside enters your home. Insulating your rim joist properly results in warmer floors, less drafts, more comfortable rooms, and your house is easier to heat and cool.
This Crawl Space in Massapequa Park, NY had no insulation in it causing the rooms and floors above it to be cold. Without the proper insulation on the walls, it causes condensation, drafts from the outside air and an uncomfortable home. Triple H insulated the crawl space walls with closed cell spray foam. The closed cell spray foam was applied to the bottom of the walls, over the sill plate, and to the top of the rim joist. Now this crawl space will have much less humidity, much warmer floors, less drafts, and a much more comfortable home.
To help this homeowner better insulate his attic. Triple H Crew went to his home in Melville, NY, removed all the old, dirty insulation, and added a new storage platform. Then the crew air sealed all the leaks and added 10" of TruSoft Cellulose Insulation
Triple H went to this home in Farmingdale, NY and installed new insulation in the attic. They started by air sealing they entire attic so there’s no air leaks in the home. Adding insulation in an attic without sealing all air leaks first should never be done, because you are burying air leaks and making them impossible to seal later, and insulation doesn’t stop air leaks. The team then blew in 10” of cellulose insulation into the attic space, reaching the optimum R-value that you should have in your attic (R-49). Blown insulation fills all gaps and odd shaped voids. Now this home will be warmer, less drafty, more comfortable and even more energy efficient.