Crawlspace Insulation
in New Westminster, BC
New Westminster is British Columbia's oldest incorporated city and has one of the highest concentrations of pre-war residential housing in Metro Vancouver. The Queen's Park neighbourhood in particular has exceptional heritage housing stock — Victorian and Edwardian homes on full perimeter foundations, many with crawlspaces that were original construction in the early 1900s. When we work in these homes, we are often the fourth or fifth generation of tradespeople to address crawlspace conditions, and the accumulated history of previous repairs — good and bad — is part of what we need to understand before planning a current project.
The majority of homes in Surrey and the surrounding communities built before 2000 have fiberglass batt insulation installed between the floor joists in the crawlspace. When this insulation was new and dry, it provided reasonable thermal resistance. The problem is that fiberglass batts installed in a vented crawlspace environment in a high-rainfall climate like ours rarely stay dry. They absorb ambient moisture, sag out of their cavities, and gradually collapse onto the ground. Wet fiberglass insulation has essentially zero R-value, adds weight that can pull down on vapor barriers or staples, and provides a hospitable nesting environment for rodents.
For crawlspaces that are not being fully encapsulated, we install new unfaced fiberglass batts or mineral wool between the joists, but only after addressing the moisture conditions that destroyed the previous insulation. Installing fresh batts into a still-damp crawlspace environment means you'll be back in the same situation within a few years. Proper sequencing matters: drainage, vapor barrier, then insulation.
Why Choose Us in New Westminster?
- Experience with New Westminster's specific soil and drainage conditions
- Custom-designed systems — not one-size-fits-all packages
- Fully licensed, insured, and WCB-covered technicians
- Written report with photos after every inspection
- Workmanship guarantee on all completed work
Request Service in New Westminster
About New Westminster — What We See Here
New Westminster's hillside topography, with much of the residential development on slopes above the Fraser River, creates drainage challenges similar to other hillside communities in the region. The older storm drainage infrastructure in established neighbourhoods has limited capacity by modern standards, and during heavy rainfall events, surface water can overwhelm curb drains and flow toward residential foundations. The clay-over-till soil profile common on the slopes holds water at the surface and creates hydrostatic pressure against foundation walls.
The city's older homes frequently have original fir framing that, when dry, is dense and hard — actually more resistant to rot than modern hem-fir in many cases. However, the moisture conditions in unencapsulated crawlspaces over the decades can compromise even dense old-growth fir over time. We pay particular attention to the condition of original sill plates, which are often the first structural element to show moisture damage because they sit closest to the ground. Where sill plates are solid, the adjacent framing is usually in better shape than the exterior appearance of the crawlspace might suggest.