Level 2 Chimney Inspection in Alamo Heights, TX
NFPA 211 calls for a Level 2 inspection at every property transfer, after any chimney fire or operating malfunction, and whenever the appliance or fuel type changes. It includes everything in a Level 1, plus a video scan of the full flue interior and access to attics, crawl spaces, and basements the chimney passes through. Tile gaps, hidden cracks, and misaligned joints don't show up in a flashlight check — the camera finds them or rules them out. The report includes captured stills from the scan, so you're never asked to take a hidden defect on faith. Serving Alamo Heights (1 ZIP codes, 8k residents) and surrounding neighborhoods with same-week scheduling.
Level 2 Chimney Inspection in Alamo Heights
NFPA 211 calls for a Level 2 inspection at every property transfer, after any chimney fire or operating malfunction, and whenever the appliance or fuel type changes. It includes everything in a Level 1, plus a video scan of the full flue interior and access to attics, crawl spaces, and basements the chimney passes through. Tile gaps, hidden cracks, and misaligned joints don't show up in a flashlight check — the camera finds them or rules them out. The report includes captured stills from the scan, so you're never asked to take a hidden defect on faith.
Local dossier · Alamo Heights, TX
Most of Alamo Heights went up between the 1920s and the 1940s, which means most of its chimneys are pushing a hundred. Flues from that era were built unlined or with first-generation clay tile — both predate the flue-lining provisions now standard in IRC R1003, and neither should be presumed serviceable without documentation. On housing this age, a Level 1 glance tells you almost nothing. The inspection that matters is a Level 2 under NFPA 211: full video scan of the flue interior, attic and crawlspace access, and written findings tied to the specific condition each one documents. What we keep finding on these blocks is consistent. Parged-over gaps between tile joints. Abandoned thimbles left from floor-furnace conversions. Smoke chambers that were never parged at all, and crowns replaced decades ago with sand-heavy mortar washes that are now failing themselves. San Antonio's climate does the rest — long stretches of roasting heat that work mortar joints open, then a rare hard freeze like February 2021 that spalls a saturated chimney face in a single week. One local wrinkle: Alamo Heights is its own city, so structural chimney work permits through its own building office, not San Antonio's. Our job here is simple to state. We put the actual condition of a 90-year-old flue on paper, photographed and ranked, so nobody has to guess.
Olmos Dam
Level 2 Chimney Inspection in Alamo Heights (Bexar County) — what's local
Alamo Heights sits in Bexar County (county seat: San Antonio). San Antonio's home county — some of the oldest masonry in Texas; clay-liner cracking and repointing dominate alongside suburban prefab work. For level 2 chimney inspection that means our Alamo Heights crew sizes up the local housing stock before quoting — and follows Bexar County permit requirements for any work that needs an inspection sign-off.
Climate & code file · Greater San Antonio
San Antonio is not one chimney market — it is a dozen of them stacked inside one city, and Chimney Standard services them with a single, unvarying standard. A century-old masonry stack on a King William Victorian, a 1970s ranch firebox off Loop 410, and a builder-grade prefab in a 2015 Stone Oak subdivision are three completely different systems, and what makes the metro specific is the combination of light annual burn and long idle seasons — most homes light a handful of fires across a short, mild winter, then sit unused for nine months.
The rare hard freeze on porous stone
A Feb-2021-class freeze is the limestone killer: water already sitting inside porous stone expands and pops the face. The best defense is keeping water out of the masonry before the cold arrives — seal the breathable stone with a vapor-permeable siloxane repellent, never a film-forming coating that traps moisture inside and accelerates spalling at the next freeze.
Limestone & lime mortar — the one that matters most
If your Alamo Heights chimney is older Hill-Country masonry, do not let a generalist repoint it with hard gray Portland. Soft limestone was laid in a breathable, high-lime mix that flexes with the stone; modern Portland is harder than the stone around it, so it transfers stress into the limestone and drives the cracking into the face — turning a repointing job into a stone-replacement job. We read the existing mortar, match its composition and color, and repoint so the repair moves with the wall through the heat-and-freeze cycle. That's the question budget crews don't even know to ask.
Cedar (Ashe juniper)
Cedar needles and the heavy December–February pollen pack into spark screens and crown washes — a clogged cap is a draft problem and a fire-screen failure at once. We clear and inspect the cap on every sweep. On wood-burners we also flag cedar's hot, fast, resin-heavy burn: it glazes a flue far quicker than seasoned oak, so a cedar-burning Alamo Heights home needs a tighter sweep interval, not the generic annual default.
Long dormancy
A Alamo Heights flue may sit unused for ten months, then get lit hard for six weeks — long enough for animals to nest, debris to collect, and a hairline crown crack to go unnoticed. A fall sweep-and-scan before the short burning season means your first cold-front fire is on a verified, clean, code-ready flue.
Code note · Greater San Antonio
South-Texas / Hill-Country code reality: porous historic stone is sealed only with a vapor-permeable siloxane repellent (never a film-forming coating), and a Feb-2021-class freeze event is the regional benchmark for the cracked-tile and open-joint damage a Level 2 scan exists to catch.
Scoped from a graded inspection
At Chimney Standard, a level 2 chimney inspection is never guesswork. We scope every job from a graded, photographed inspection first — the NFPA 211 level the evidence calls for — so the work is matched to what your flue and masonry actually need, with the report to prove it. The documented inspection is the record the level 2 chimney inspection is built on.
Chimney inspection in Alamo HeightsEvery level 2 chimney inspection in Alamo Heights
Deliverables
- Level-appropriate inspection per NFPA 211
- Photo documentation of findings
- Written findings summary
- Plain-English next-step recommendations
How a job runs
Arrive
1-hour arrival window, text 30 min before with tech's name + photo.
Inspect
Full inspection with photos so you see what we see.
Execute
Code-compliant materials, HEPA vacuum, clean site.
Document
Photo report + 1-year workmanship warranty in writing.
4+ neighborhoods in Alamo Heights
Same-week service across every neighborhood in Alamo Heights. Don't see yours? Call (XXX) XXX-XXXX — if it's in Alamo Heights, we cover it.
The Alamo Heights advantage.
Our Alamo Heights crew lives in the metro they serve, across Bexar County. They know which Alamo Heights neighborhoods — Olmos Park line, Terrell Hills, Lower Alamo Heights and more — have crumbling crowns, and which newer builds skipped the cap. Local code knowledge, local referrals, local accountability for every level 2 chimney inspection.
More services in Alamo Heights
Level 2 Chimney Inspection in nearby Bexar cities
We cover level 2 chimney inspection across Bexar County — same crew, same warranty. Nearby Alamo Heights cities we also serve:
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Get it inspected. Get it in writing.
Flat fee confirmed when you book. Same-week scheduling. A pass/fail verdict within 48 hours.
24/7 Response
Chimney fire, storm hit, active leak, or a flue you're not sure about? We answer 7 AM to midnight and the assessment ends in a written safe-to-use verdict — including a do-not-use notice when the evidence supports one. After-hours dispatch runs subject to crew availability.
Emergency line