Crawl Space Radon Mitigation in Fort Thomas
Crawl spaces require a different mitigation approach than slab homes. Our Cincinnati mitigators install reinforced vapor barriers, seal entry points, and pair with active depressurization to bring radon below action level. Often combined with moisture control. Fort Thomas sits within our service area for Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, with same-week scheduling typical for routine jobs.
Typical pricing in Fort Thomas
$1,800-$3,500
Pricing varies by job specifics. Free phone or on-site quotes; fixed pricing after our technician has assessed the job.
Crawl Space Radon Mitigation in Fort Thomas: pre-war upscale Tudor and Colonial revival foundations and Cincinnati Arch geology
Crawl Space Radon Mitigation in Fort Thomas involves sub-membrane depressurization: a 20-mil polyethylene liner sealed to the crawl walls with an inline fan drawing soil gas from beneath, working on the crawl-space envelope where ground-source soil gas enters through bare earth. The service is the right scope for any crawl-space-foundation home testing above 4.0 pCi/L, in place of sub-slab depressurization which does not apply to crawl spaces.
Fort Thomas's stock is dominated by 1900s-1940s Tudor, Colonial revival, and Cape Cod homes built when the Fort Thomas Army post drove the suburb's first wave. Stone foundations, plaster walls, steep cathedral or vaulted ceilings, and attic-mounted HVAC equipment from later upgrades are the prevailing pattern. The bluff terrain at the east edge of Fort Thomas creates wind-loading and freeze-thaw exposure that drives ice-damming on under-insulated roof planes. Fort Thomas sits on the Cincinnati Arch geology (fractured Ordovician limestone and shale) that drives elevated regional radon exposure across the entire Greater Cincinnati metro, including Campbell County.
ANSI/AARST CCAH-2020-0523 requires membrane sealing and a manometer verifying continuous negative pressure across the membrane. The Kentucky Radon Program (Cabinet for Health and Family Services) oversees radon program compliance for Fort Thomas, and the Kentucky Radon Program requires NRPP or NRSB certification for residential mitigation work.
- County
- Campbell, KY
- Geology
- Cincinnati Arch (Ordovician limestone and shale)
- EPA action level
- 4.0 pCi/L on long-term average
- Service category
- Mitigation