Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Greenbrier
Chimney liner installation and chimney rebuilds in Greenbrier, TN typically cost between $1,800 and $6,500 depending on scope, and most projects are completed in one to two days. Richard Anderson, our Owner and Lead Technician, handles these jobs personally — from the initial camera inspection to the final smoke test.

We’re on Greenbrier roads every week. Whether it’s a 1960s farmhouse off Bethel Road with a cracked clay liner or a 2005 subdivision home near US-41 with a corroded prefab flue, we’ve seen the specific chimney failures that Greenbrier’s mix of rural legacy housing and newer exurb construction produces. That local familiarity means faster diagnostics and no guesswork about what your chimney stack is hiding. Call (833) 753-1759 for a free estimate — we’re usually in the 37073 ZIP within 24 to 48 hours.
Why Landmark Chimney Cleaning Service Tennessee Is Greenbrier’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
Greenbrier homeowners aren’t looking for a dispatch center — they’re looking for someone who understands why their chimney has two flues when they only see one fireplace. Richard Anderson has spent 14 years specializing exclusively in chimney work, and he arrives as the technician who’ll actually be on your roof, not a salesperson who hands off to subcontractors.
Our reputation here is built on solving problems that other sweeps miss. 364 homeowners have rated us 4.9 stars, and a growing share of those reviews come from Robertson County — including Greenbrier customers who found us after a generalist inspection failed to catch shared-stack hazards or abandoned flue issues. We carry Chimney Liner & Rebuild materials from HeatShield, Gelco, and Olympia Chimney on our truck, which means most Greenbrier jobs don’t wait for parts.
Response time matters in winter. When a liner failure backs up smoke or a crown crack lets water saturate your firebox, we’ll prioritize Greenbrier calls same-day or next-day — we know Route 41 and the back roads well enough to route around Middle Tennessee’s sudden ice storms.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Greenbrier
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
A stainless steel liner is the standard permanent fix for deteriorated clay flue tiles, and it’s what we install most often in Greenbrier’s older farmhouses. These chimneys were built for open-hearth fires, not modern gas inserts or EPA-certified wood stoves that run cooler and wetter — conditions that accelerate corrosion in unlined or damaged flues. We spec DuraFlex and Olympia Chimney stainless systems sized precisely to your appliance’s BTU output and draft requirements. In Greenbrier, we regularly pull out clay liners that have cracked from decades of thermal cycling — the freeze-thaw damage just finishes what years of heating stress started.
Flexible Liner for Offset Chimneys
Not every Greenbrier chimney runs straight. Older masonry stacks often jog around timber framing or were built with offsets to clear roof lines — rigid stainless pipe won’t navigate those bends. We use flexible DuraFlex liners that conform to irregular flue paths while maintaining smooth interior walls that resist creosote buildup. This matters particularly in Greenbrier’s 1940s–1970s housing stock, where chimneys were hand-laid by masons working around existing structures rather than engineered from plans.
Liner Replacement
Sometimes the liner isn’t just cracked — it’s missing sections, collapsed, or was never installed in an abandoned flue that got pressed back into service. Liner replacement in Greenbrier demands knowing which flue served what. On a 1950s farmhouse just off Bethel Road, we found a homeowner had replaced their old furnace with a gas insert in the living-room flue, never realizing the adjacent flue — once serving a long-gone cookstove — was open, packed with decades of debris, and sharing the same masonry stack. We installed a new stainless steel DuraFlex liner in the active flue and sealed the abandoned one, preventing a serious carbon-monoxide risk. That’s the kind of hidden condition we expect in Greenbrier’s dual-flue chimneys.
Partial and Full Chimney Rebuild
When spalling brick, deteriorated mortar joints, or a collapsed crown have compromised the chimney structure, a liner alone won’t save it. Partial rebuilds address the firebox, smoke chamber, or upper stack while preserving sound lower masonry. Full rebuilds become necessary when the entire stack is structurally unsound — we see this in Greenbrier after years of unchecked water infiltration through crown cracks, accelerated by Robertson County’s hard freeze-thaw cycles. Richard Anderson manages these projects start to finish, coordinating materials and ensuring the rebuilt chimney meets current codes for clearances and flue sizing. No secondary contractors, no coordination gaps.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in Greenbrier
We don’t source from hardware-store closeout bins. For Greenbrier installations, we stock and install professional-grade materials from HeatShield, Gelco, and Olympia Chimney — the same lines that certified chimney professionals spec nationwide. HeatShield’s cerfractory resurfacing system lets us restore deteriorated clay flue surfaces when full liner replacement isn’t necessary, saving some Greenbrier homeowners significant cost. Gelco caps and Famco dampers handle our local weather: driving rain, sudden temperature swings, and the occasional ice accumulation that tests lesser hardware. Because we carry inventory rather than ordering per job, most Greenbrier liner installations don’t face multi-day parts delays.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Greenbrier Homes
- Abandoned secondary flues sharing the stack. On older Robertson County farmsteads around Greenbrier, chimneys were routinely built with a second flue for a central wood-furnace or cookstove that was decommissioned decades ago — and local techs regularly find homeowners who’ve unknowingly been venting a new gas insert into one flue while a capped, debris-filled second flue quietly shares the same chimney stack, a code and safety violation invisible until a full sweep and camera inspection.
- Freeze-thaw destruction of mortar and crowns. Middle Tennessee’s notorious winter ice storms hit Robertson County hard, and repeated freeze-thaw cycles accelerate spalling of mortar joints and crown cracking on exposed masonry chimneys — damage that’s easy to miss until water infiltration rots out a firebox.
- Failed clay tile liners from thermal stress. Clay tile liners in 1940s–1970s farmhouse chimneys are often cracked or missing sections from decades of thermal stress and lack of inspection, making them unsafe for modern high-efficiency appliances that produce cooler, more acidic flue gases.
- Prefab inserts crammed into unlined masonry. As Nashville’s suburbs pushed north into 37073, some homeowners or prior owners installed zero-clearance fireplace inserts into old masonry chimneys without proper liner connection — creating a gap where creosote accumulates and heat radiates into combustible framing.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Greenbrier, TN
Here’s what Greenbrier homeowners actually pay:
| Stainless steel liner (single flue, standard install) | $1,800 – $3,200 |
| Flexible liner with offset navigation | $2,200 – $3,800 |
| Liner replacement with flue repair | $2,500 – $4,500 |
| Partial chimney rebuild (crown, upper stack) | $3,500 – $5,500 |
| Full chimney rebuild | $4,500 – $6,500+ |
These ranges reflect Greenbrier’s market — labor and material costs in Robertson County run slightly below Nashville proper, but older chimneys here often need unexpected remediation (debris removal, abandoned flue sealing, firebox refractory repair) that adds scope. Height matters: two-story farmhouses with steep roof pitches require more labor than single-story ranchers. We inspect with a camera before quoting, so you’ll know the full scope before work begins. Estimates are free — call (833) 753-1759 to schedule.

We Also Serve Cities Near Greenbrier
Richard Anderson regularly travels from our Nashville base to handle chimney liner and rebuild work throughout northern Middle Tennessee. We also serve Millersville, White House, Springfield, and Goodlettsville — though Greenbrier’s unique mix of legacy farmsteads and newer construction keeps us particularly busy in the 37073 area.
Serving Greenbrier, TN — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Greenbrier area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Greenbrier
We typically schedule Greenbrier appointments within 24 to 48 hours, and same-day service is often available for urgent situations like smoke backup or visible structural damage. Call (833) 753-1759 — we’ll confirm our next available slot for your 37073 address.
Yes, we service the full Greenbrier area, from subdivisions near US-41 to farmsteads on Bethel Road and the rural roads beyond — our trucks are equipped for gravel-driveway access and properties without conventional street addressing.
We prioritize urgent calls from Greenbrier for smoke infiltration, carbon monoxide concerns, or structural chimney damage that poses immediate safety risk — Richard Anderson will assess whether temporary venting measures or full repair is needed on arrival. For emergency scheduling, call (833) 753-1759 directly.
Greenbrier pricing typically runs comparable to Springfield and slightly below Goodlettsville for equivalent scope, though older Greenbrier farmsteads more often require unexpected flue remediation or abandoned-flue sealing that can add $400–$800 to a standard liner install. We quote exact scope after camera inspection — call (833) 753-1759 for your free estimate.
Our stainless steel liner installations carry a lifetime manufacturer warranty through DuraFlex or Olympia Chimney, and we back our workmanship with our own service guarantee — if a detail fails due to our installation, Richard Anderson returns to make it right. Full rebuild warranties vary by scope; we’ll document coverage in your written proposal before any work begins.
Yes, both flues must be inspected, especially in Greenbrier’s legacy farmsteads where the second flue may be uncapped, debris-filled, or improperly sealed — creating a shared-stack hazard that allows carbon monoxide or creosote to migrate between flues. We use video inspection to document the condition of every flue in the stack, not just the active one.
Look for flaking tile pieces in your firebox, white efflorescence staining on exterior brick, sudden drafts of cold air, or smoke odors when the fireplace isn’t in use — all indicate cracks or gaps that freeze-thaw cycles have widened. In Greenbrier, we see this pattern accelerate after hard winters; a camera inspection confirms what visual signs suggest.
Often yes — if the masonry structure, crown, and firebox are sound, a stainless steel or flexible liner installation restores safe venting without reconstruction. We determine this through structural assessment and video inspection; many Greenbrier chimneys need only liner replacement if caught before water damage progresses.
This is a common Greenbrier issue where exurb-era inserts were added to legacy chimneys without proper liner connection — creating a dangerous gap for creosote accumulation and heat transfer into combustible framing. We typically need to install a listed liner system properly sized and connected to the insert, or in some cases recommend removing the insert if the chimney can’t be made compliant.
We rebuild and restore chimneys on Greenbrier’s older farmsteads with attention to original proportions and compatible materials, though we work to current NFPA 211 safety standards rather than purely historical appearance — function comes first on a venting system. Richard Anderson will assess whether your chimney’s condition permits preservation of original brick or requires replacement with matching new masonry.
Written by Richard Anderson, Owner and Lead Technician at Landmark Chimney Cleaning Service Tennessee, serving Greenbrier and Robertson County since 2011.