Chimney Caps in Shelton, CT

Quality Chimney Cap Services in Fairfield County

Improve your home’s safety and keep it cozy with our chimney cap services in Shelton.

100% Customer Satisfaction

Chimney Cap Advantages

Our Chimney Caps Make the Difference

  • Protects your chimney from debris, animals, and weather, helping it last longer.
  • Improves your fireplace’s performance by improving draft and preventing downdrafts.
  • Reduces moisture, which helps prevent costly chimney repairs.
  • Makes your home safer by reducing the risk of chimney fires.
  • Close-up of a brick chimney with a metal cap from Chimney Caps Fairfield County CT. The grid design stands proudly against a clear blue sky, showcasing expert craftsmanship.

    Certified Chimney CT, Fairfield County

    Local Chimney Cap Professionals

    At Certified Chimney CT, we provide excellent chimney cap services in Shelton, CT. We’ve been helping homeowners in Fairfield County for many years. Our skilled team makes sure your chimney is well protected. We offer quality service,for chimney cap replacement, repair, or installation. We’re here to help with all your chimney needs.

    Close-up of a metal chimney cap with a bird-proof design on a rooftop, highlighting the expertise of Chimney Caps Fairfield County CT. The background features a blurred landscape of fields and houses under a clear blue sky.

    Our Process Explained

    Easy Service Steps From consultation to completion, we simplify the process.

  • Initial Assessment: We evaluate your chimney’s condition and needs.
  • Recommendation: We provide the best options for chimney cap installation or repair.
  • Installation/Repair: Our team installs or repairs your chimney cap to keep it working properly.
  • A metal chimney vent, complemented by a sturdy chimney cap, is installed on a shingled roof. It overlooks a suburban neighborhood with houses and open fields. The sky is clear and sunny, perfect for anyone considering chimney repair in Fairfield County, CT.
    A close-up of a brick chimney with a metal cap in Fairfield County CT, set against a clear blue sky. This chimney, ready for any repairs needed, is part of a building roof, with snow dusting the top bricks. Bare tree branches elegantly frame the background.

    Chimney Cap Services

    Complete Chimney Care

    Chimney caps are important for keeping your chimney safe and working its best. At Certified Chimney CT, we can install a new chimney cap for your home in Shelton, CT. We can replace and repair chimney caps, so your chimney stays in excellent condition. Homeowners in Fairfield County trust us to help them with their chimneys. Contact us at 877-793-3712 today!

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    About Certified Chimney CT

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    Shelton was settled by the English as part of the town of Stratford, Connecticut, in 1639. On May 15, 1656, the Court of the Colony of Connecticut in Hartford affirmed that the town of Stratford included all of the territory 12 miles (19 km) inland from Long Island Sound, between the Housatonic River and the Fairfield town line. In 1662, Stratford selectmen Lt. Joseph Judson, Captain Joseph Hawley and John Minor had secured all the written deeds of transfer from the Golden Hill Paugussett Indian Nation for this vast territory that comprises the present-day towns of Trumbull, Shelton and Monroe. Shelton was split off from Stratford in 1789, as Huntington (named for Samuel Huntington). The current name originated in a manufacturing village started in the 1860s named for the Shelton Company founded by Edward N. Shelton-also founder of Ousatonic Water Power Company. The rapidly growing borough of Shelton incorporated as a city in 1915 and was consolidated with the town of Huntington in 1919 establishing the present city of Shelton.

    Shelton was the site of one of the largest arson fires in the United States history. It happened in 1975 when the Sponge Rubber Products plant (formerly owned by B.F. Goodrich) was set on fire. Charles Moeller, president of parent company Grand Sheet Metal Products, was acquitted of criminal charges, but in a suit under civil law (where preponderance of evidence suffices to establish a factual claim), a jury found in 1988 the insurer was entitled to disallow claims on the fire losses, based on the finding that the company’s top officials arranged the fire to claim insurance money. Eight others were convicted or pleaded guilty.

    The explosion that destroyed the Sponge Rubber Plant on Canal Street in 1975 marked the start of the decline of Shelton’s industries. During the remainder of the 1970s and 1980s several firms that operated factories along the banks of the Housatonic River either went out of business or relocated to areas where labor and operating costs were cheaper. In 1995, Sikorsky Aircraft closed a plant off Bridgeport Avenue that manufactured electrical components for helicopters.

    Learn more about Shelton.