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    Roaring Fork Spray Foam

    5.0 (1 review)

    Services - Roaring Fork Spray Foam

    Insulation installation

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    5 years ago

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    Deeper Green Consulting - Common places that your home may be losing energy

    Deeper Green Consulting

    (4 reviews)

    A BIG Thank You to the amazing Team at Deeper Green Consulting who have consistently provided the…read morehighest level of consulting and implementation services on several projects for which I have hired them. Led by Chief Sustainability Officer Matt Wright, everyone at Deeper Green are consummate experts in the fields of sustainability and energy efficiency and from those that I am familiar with, are widely considered the best consultants in this field throughout Colorado and beyond. From home energy efficiency improvements to commercial sustainable development consulting, call Deeper Green first and get your job done right!

    Deeper Green (DG) conducted an energy audit, added insulation in exterior walls, added exhaust…read morefans, and insulated cantilevers and a high ceiling. DG has few employees and uses contractors to do most of their work. However, DG rarely oversees or manages the contractor's work. Unfortunately, I had to be a project manager for work on my condo. Mike Petzak of DG is responsive and went the extra mile for me. He has a good "midwest" work ethic in contrast to the typical local ethic. Mike Petzak is a good salesman first, but he touts his engineering (sales tactic). For example, we spent weeks discussing numerous ways to insulate the living room ceiling; most were impracticable for one reason or another. Spray insulation would block the air circulation for the cold-roof ventilation. Cellulose insulation would not significantly improve the R-value. Structural panels or SIPs would change the exterior appearance and need HOA approval. Installation of rigid form panels, etc. I am not convinced that the design we used is the best one for this condo. DG should have presented better workable solutions up front. It should not be that difficult. After giving DG a 60% deposit ($18K of $30K), we scheduled the work. On the start date, no work was started. So I called DG and discovered they actually forgot about the work at my condo. Fears of being ripped-off crossed my mind. However, DG scrambled to reorganize contractors to start work later that week. The wall insulation contractor (later nicknamed 50%) did not insulate the entire wall (top to bottom) and missed some exterior walls completely. I had to show 50% which walls were missed and proved that the blow-in insulation only went 2 to 4 feet from the blow-in hole in each stud cavity. One to two additional holes were drilled in each stud cavity to correct the problem. Correct blow-in insulation should be a standard practice, not a lesson learned. I wonder what's the quality of previous jobs or future jobs not managed properly? 50% also installed bath fans and connected the exhaust hoses such that exhaust from one bath flowed into the other bathroom. I complained and the problem was fixed. Solution is two fans, two vents, which should be standard practice, not a lesson learned. During the work, I needed to repair several damages made by the contractors. Twice a toilet was leaking after being abused by the contractors. The refrigerator water line was broken after being moved too many times and needed to be replaced. An exterior door was knocked off its hinges from being opened too wide. The holes drilled through the ceiling are horribly patched and do not match in color or texture, which is still not fixed. 50% rushed to leave the project and did not repair or texture all of the holes at the end of the project, which I had to do. The drywall joints in the ceiling are visible. Painting the wall or ceiling was not in the contract. Thus, I had to paint walls and the ceiling. During the work, contractors did not secure the condo or adequately clean up when they left for the day or at the end of the project. Exterior doors were left open, blocked open by the refrigerator, and/or unlocked. I had to clean up the contractors' messes daily because I lived there during construction. Additionally, the contractors never did a final cleanup of the walls, doors, floor, kitchen cabinets, etc. Even after showing the outside mess to 50%, he refused to clean it up; I did. There are other concerns, but you get the picture; the work quality was poor. The project was quoted to take 2 weeks at the proposal stage, 3 weeks at the contract stage, 4 weeks at the start of the project. After 5 weeks, I had to shut down the project and leave for prior commitments. Because they were not finished, I had to rearrange my schedule and travel an additional 1200 miles to act as project manager again, so they could "finish" work in the 6th week. Their delay was mainly because 50% worked only 5 to 6 hours per day. Another delay was because DG did not have scaffolding to reach a 22-foot-high ceiling. Note: my ceiling height did not change in months after the proposal/audit and before construction. Not having proper equipment is just poor planning. Buyer beware.

    Roaring Fork Spray Foam - masonry_concrete - Updated May 2026

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