Crawl Space Encapsulation in Trenton, GA

Trenton sits on the valley floor of Dade County, hemmed in between Lookout Mountain to the east and Sand Mountain to the west — which means runoff comes off two plateaus and lands where you live. That valley floor is limestone, and Dade County holds more than 160 mapped caves, so water moves underground as freely as it runs across the surface. Lookout Creek winds through town and rises often enough to have its own USGS gage. A vented crawl space here stays damp until it's properly sealed — no dehumidifier required.

A LOT OF PEOPLE DON'T NOTICE THIS

Why Trenton crawl spaces stay wet

Trenton is squeezed between two mountains, and every hard rain sends water off the sandstone caps of Lookout and Sand Mountain down onto the valley floor. That floor is limestone — cave country — so the ground holds moisture between rains, and Lookout Creek can come up fast enough to close roads around town. A vented crawl space pulls that damp air straight in through the foundation, where it condenses on the cooler ground and framing under your floor. The result is mold, wood rot, soaked insulation, and musty air pulled up into the house through the floor.


WE CAN DO THEM BOTH

Older homes and newer builds — both need sealing

Trenton has been the seat of Dade County since the 1840s, and the housing runs from older homes near the courthouse square to newer builds spread out along the valley. Either way, our system seals the humidity out of the crawl space instead of trying to dry it after the fact. We line the walls and rim joists with closed-cell spray foam, cover the ground, and seal the vents — so the damp air never gets in to begin with. That's why we don't hand you a dehumidifier and a power bill to run it forever.

With the vents sealed and the ground fully covered, the crawl space stays dry and stable year-round — no standing humidity, no musty air rising into the house, and no dehumidifier running up the power bill. The space under your floor finally works with your home instead of against it.

Benefits

Once sealed, the crawl space joins your home's conditioned envelope, and your HVAC stops fighting humid air rising through the floor. Ductwork under the house runs in a sealed, moderate space instead of a damp one, air leakage through the floor system drops, and the system cycles less to hold the same temperature. And because our encapsulation needs no dehumidifier, there's no extra appliance under there adding to your power bill month after month.

Energy Savings


  • Why don't you install a dehumidifier when other companies do?

    Because we actually seal the crawl space. We line the walls and rim joists with closed-cell spray foam — it's the insulation and the moisture-and-air barrier in one. Most companies don't run closed-cell foam, so they can't fully seal the space; they drop in a dehumidifier to manage the moisture they can't keep out. That's a bigger bill up front and an appliance running on your power for years. We're one of the only crews in Catoosa County that truly seals it, so it stays dry on its own — no dehumidifier.

  • Is this more or less expensive than a dehumidifier system?

    Less, once you look past day one. Ours is a one-time seal with nothing to run — no dehumidifier on the power bill, no filters, no unit to replace in eight or ten years. Systems built around a dehumidifier usually cost more overall once you add the equipment, the electricity, and the upkeep.

  • It rains a lot here — can encapsulation really handle it?

    Yes. Heavy rain and ridge runoff are exactly why we seal with closed-cell foam and a heavy ground barrier, and add a sump pump where the water table or runoff calls for it.

  • Will it lower my energy bills?

    Yes. A sealed, conditioned crawl space stops your heated and cooled air from leaking into the ground and eases the load on your HVAC — which shows up on the power bill.

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