Masonry & Chimney · Conway, MA

Masonry & Chimney in Conway, Massachusetts

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Contractors serving Conway

Masonry & Chimney in Conway — what to know

Rebates & incentives

Conway is in National Grid electric territory, so homeowners are Mass Save eligible. Masonry work is not itself a Mass Save rebate, but chimney relining and combustion-safety testing often follow weatherization or an oil or propane to heat-pump conversion. Many Conway homes run on oil or propane out here with no natural gas service, and pulling that equipment can leave a flue venting nothing or an oversized liner serving only a gas water heater.

Start with the free National Grid Mass Save Home Energy Assessment. It identifies the insulation and combustion-safety work, and you schedule the chimney relining once you know which flues stay active.

Permits in Conway

Massachusetts has no masonry license, so Conway masons work under a state Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) registration with insurance. Chimney rebuilds, structural masonry, and fireplace work require a building permit from the Conway building department, and relining must meet the state fire code (527 CMR). CSIA sweep certification is voluntary. With its historic village, visible exterior masonry changes there can draw local historical attention, and work near the South River or wetlands may need conservation commission review, so allow lead time in a small town.

Typical project cost

Conway sits in the western Massachusetts pricing band, with labor generally below Boston-metro but steep hillside access and rural travel a factor. Chimney repointing or tuckpointing typically runs $1,000 to $3,500; rebuilding above the roofline is usually $2,500 to $8,000 or more; relining runs about $2,500 to $7,000. Cap and crown repair generally runs $300 to $1,500, and brick or stone step and walkway repair $1,500 to $6,000; retaining walls $4,000 to $15,000 or more. Cost drivers are chimney height and hillside access, lime-matching on older brick, and hard hilltown freeze-thaw.

About Conway homes

Conway is a Franklin County hilltown of about 1,773 residents in the hills between Deerfield and the upland towns, with roughly 845 housing units and a median home age near 51 years. A rural community known for its historic village and covered footbridge, Conway mixes 19th-century homes and farmhouses with newer homes on wooded hillside lots.

That mix shapes the masonry. Older homes carry brick chimneys with clay-tile or unlined flues that need lime-matched repointing, and cold hilltown winters drive hard freeze-thaw crown cracking and spalling. Newer hillside stock leans more to brick-veneer chimney maintenance, cap and crown repair, and hardscape such as steps, walkways, and retaining walls, with fieldstone work common given the area's stone-wall heritage and steep grades.

Common questions — Masonry & Chimney in Conway

Does my Conway home qualify for rebates on chimney work?
Chimney work itself is not rebated, but Conway is National Grid territory and Mass Save eligible. If relining ties into weatherization or a heat-pump conversion, the assessment can fund the related energy upgrades while you pay for the masonry.
Why does my old Conway chimney need lime mortar?
The 19th-century brick was laid in soft lime mortar that flexes with the masonry. Hard Portland cement traps moisture and spalls the brick in hard hilltown freeze-thaw, so matching the original mortar protects the chimney.
Do I need a permit for chimney work in Conway?
Rebuilds, structural repointing, and fireplace work need a building permit from the Conway building department, and relining must meet 527 CMR. Routine sweeping does not. Visible exterior changes in the historic village can draw local review.
My chimney crown cracked over winter. How serious is that?
It is worth addressing soon. A cracked crown lets hard hilltown freeze-thaw water into the flue and masonry below, accelerating costlier damage. Crown repair in the $300 to $1,500 range is cheap insurance against a future rebuild.
Can a mason build a retaining wall on my steep hillside lot?
Yes, retaining walls are common on Conway's steep grades for drainage and access. Budget $4,000 to $15,000 or more depending on height, drainage, and whether the work sits near a wetland boundary.