Masonry & Chimney · Granby, MA

Masonry & Chimney in Granby, Massachusetts

Compare contractors serving Granby, Hampshire County — call them directly, or send one request and let qualified pros come to you.

50 contractors serving Granby.

Contractors serving Granby

Masonry & Chimney in Granby — what to know

Rebates & incentives

Granby is in National Grid electric territory, so homeowners are Mass Save eligible. Masonry is not a Mass Save rebate, but chimney relining and combustion-safety testing often follow weatherization or an oil or gas to heat-pump conversion. When an old boiler is removed, its flue may be capped or abandoned, and a gas water heater left on the chimney usually needs a correctly sized liner.

Start with the free National Grid Mass Save Home Energy Assessment. It identifies the insulation and combustion work, then you schedule the masonry around which flues stay active.

Permits in Granby

Massachusetts has no masonry license, so Granby masons work under a state Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) registration with insurance. Chimney rebuilds, structural masonry, and fireplace work need a building permit from the Granby building department, and relining must meet the state fire code (527 CMR). CSIA sweep certification is voluntary. As a smaller Pioneer Valley town, Granby handles permits through its building inspector, so confirm scope and whether a structural job needs review before starting.

Typical project cost

Granby sits in the western-Massachusetts pricing band, generally below Boston metro and eastern coastal rates. 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. What drives the number is chimney height and roof access, whether the work is structural or cosmetic, and matching soft lime mortar on older brick rather than hard Portland cement.

About Granby homes

Granby is a Hampshire County town of about 6,096 residents across roughly 2,784 housing units, with a median home age near 62 years. The Pioneer Valley town mixes older farmhouses and village homes with postwar houses on rural and hillside lots between South Hadley and Belchertown.

The older stock often carries brick chimneys with clay-tile or unlined flues that need lime-matched repointing and relining. Western Massachusetts winters bring hard freeze-thaw cycles that drive water into the joints and spall the brick, so repointing and crown repair are routine. Newer Granby homes lean toward brick and stone veneer, caps, and hardscape such as steps and walls.

Common questions — Masonry & Chimney in Granby

Why does my Granby chimney keep losing mortar?
Western Massachusetts freeze-thaw cycles drive water into the joints, where it freezes and spalls the mortar over winters. Repointing plus a sound crown and cap keeps the moisture out and slows the damage.
My older Granby farmhouse has a clay-tile flue. Should I reline it?
Clay tile cracks with age and may not be sized for a modern appliance. A correctly sized stainless liner brings it up to 527 CMR clearances and vents safely, commonly needed after a heating change.
Do I need a permit for chimney work in Granby?
Rebuilds, structural masonry, and fireplace work need a building permit from the Granby building department, and relining must meet 527 CMR. Routine sweeping and inspection do not require a permit.
Is chimney work eligible for rebates in Granby?
The masonry itself is not rebated, but Granby is National Grid territory and Mass Save eligible. If relining is part of weatherization or a heat-pump conversion, the related energy upgrades may qualify under the assessment.
Should the mortar match my old brick?
Yes, on older Granby homes. Hard modern cement traps moisture and cracks soft historic brick, so a mason matches a softer lime mortar to the original so the repair lasts.