Radon Mitigation Systems in Park Hills
Our Cincinnati mitigators design and install active sub-slab depressurization (ASD) systems custom to your foundation type: slab, basement, or crawl space. Radon abatement and radon mitigation describe the same work, reducing indoor radon to the ANSI/AARST CCAH-2020-0523 standard. Every install is verified post-completion with a 48-hour follow-up test. Workmanship warranty terms confirmed in writing before work begins. Park Hills sits within our service area for Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, with same-week scheduling typical for routine jobs.
Typical pricing in Park Hills
$1,200-$2,400
Pricing varies by job specifics. Free phone or on-site quotes; fixed pricing after our technician has assessed the job.
Radon Mitigation Systems in Park Hills: pre-war Kenton County hilltop foundations and Cincinnati Arch geology
Radon Mitigation Systems in Park Hills involves sub-slab depressurization with an inline radon fan, sealed slab penetrations, and an exterior discharge stack above the eave line, working on the slab-to-soil interface and any below-grade openings where soil gas enters the home. The service is the standard installation for any Cincinnati home testing above the EPA action level of 4.0 pCi/L on a 90-day or annual long-term average.
Park Hills is hilltop Kenton County with mostly 1920s-1940s Tudor and Colonial revival single-family. Plaster walls, basement furnaces, steep terrain. Park Hills sits on the Cincinnati Arch geology (fractured Ordovician limestone and shale) that drives elevated regional radon exposure across the entire Greater Cincinnati metro, including Kenton County.
Mitigation systems installed in Ohio must meet ANSI/AARST CCAH-2020-0523 for existing dwellings and be installed by a contractor licensed under ORC 3723.02 (Ohio Department of Health Radon Licensing Program). The Kentucky Radon Program (Cabinet for Health and Family Services) oversees radon program compliance for Park Hills, and the Kentucky Radon Program requires NRPP or NRSB certification for residential mitigation work.
- County
- Kenton, KY
- Geology
- Cincinnati Arch (Ordovician limestone and shale)
- EPA action level
- 4.0 pCi/L on long-term average
- Service category
- Mitigation