
Parkfield Insulation
About us
Parkfield Insulation does new and existing residential and commercial insulation projects using energy efficient, environmentally friendly NuWool Cellulose Insulation and Icynene Spray Foam Insulation. Our coverage area is all of central and north central Ohio and we offer FREE Estimates. Call to schedule an appointment today at (614) 336-2618 or toll free (614) 402-5140. Additional emails - [email protected], [email protected]. https://sricolumbus.com/ NOW OFFERING GUTTER installation, cleaning and repairs.
Business highlights
Services we offer
Parkfield Insulation offers NuWool Cellulose Insulation and Icynene Spray Foam Insulation for both New and Existing Homes. Parkfield Insulation provides our insulation services for commercial and agricultural facilities as well. Now offering GUTTER installation cleaning and repairs. Contact us today for a quote.
Amenities
Free Estimates
Yes
Accepted Payment Methods
- CreditCard
Number of Stars | Image of Distribution | Number of Ratings |
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72% | ||
12% | ||
4% | ||
8% | ||
4% |
"We regret the inconvenience caused to the homeowner because of delays in resolving the homeowner’s concerns. During the completion of the work, there was a miscommunication between the foam crew and the homeowner regarding foaming of the sill plate below the bandsills. This area was taken care of on a second trip to the house along with the issues involving the plastic covering the floors of both crawl spaces. Several return trips were made to correct the homeowner’s concerns and we received verbal confirmation of his satisfaction with the project completion. Parkfield Insulation strives to have all customers satisfied with the thoroughness and timeliness of our work. We deeply regret any inconvenience on behalf of the homeowner and the miscommunication that occurred."
"Parkfield Insulation Services appreciates the feedback and understands that we fell short of our high standard of service for this client. We have reached out to the client with our sincere apology and have worked to answer his various concerns to his satisfaction. Since that time, we have reached out to the client on numerous occasions to confirm that he has no further issues and have received no response."
Crew was late and then had to come back a 2nd time because they missed multiple spots and air was penetrating areas owner told me would be sealed. They did not fuss and said they would be back out to re-spray.
Their truck kept breaking and had to reschedule multiple times.
They re-sprayed and fixed most of the problem spots but some still exist due to the fact that their equipment is not very flexible and could not reach into tight spots.
I will have to buy the foam spray kits on-line to finish where they could not reach. I chose to go with them instead of DIY foam kit because they were only $100 more. Hindsight I will have to spend $300 more to finish the job so I would recommend using the spray foam kits if you are going to do your band boards.
Insulation was added to the garage attic through a ceiling entry in the garage and through and through a closet in our babies room. Our theory on what went wrong is based on a probable leak in the injection hose... but it could also be bad installation technique or process. The two installers that showed up seemed to hate each other, which may not be a recipe for success, either.
Here is what we experienced as a result of their install:
- The baby's room was filthy. We moved everything to the far end of the room (about 15 feet away from the closet and 20 feet away from the closet attic entry) placed plastic drop cloths on everything and yet every piece of furniture was covered in insulation. We spent 4 hours cleaning it.
- We found insulation in our babies one furnace feed, behind the register. The whole feed was clogged. We found this most odd because it blows air so you would think that the generally positive pressure would have helped (maybe a recommendation would be to make sure your furnace or Air Conditioning is on the whole time you have insulation installed or make sure your registers are fully sealed within adjacent rooms).
- We found a never-ending amount of insulation in our clean air intake in the baby's room. We just found this, today, during a duct cleaning. Lesson learned: seal your clean air intakes in the room(s) adjacent to the attic (and shouldn't the service provider know about this problem if it is normal?). This is, by far, the most severe problem and I don't know how it will be fixed. We have pictures of this to help explain the extreme nature of this problem. The picture only shows what I have gotten out so far, which is only about a foot down. The intake runs horizontally for about 12 feet. I have not yet found the end to the insulation.
- Our garage was totally covered in insulation. We spent about 4 hours cleaning this up... it was easier to clean than the baby's room, but there was much more to clean. We have some pictures of this as well.
- The insulation dams constructed around each entry were full of gaps, so when you opened an attic door after the additional insulation installation, insulation simply fell out. This caused more clean up work.
- Newly added baffles that were designed to draw air from the external ridge vent were full of insulation. That seems counter productive.
Licensing
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