Crawl Space Encapsulation in Westside, Corpus Christi TX
Westside (ZIP 78405) sits within the Corpus Christi TX service area. Established working-class to middle neighborhoods adjacent to the central hospital district. Older housing stock from the 1940s through 1970s with later infill. Mature tree canopy.
Hospital-district adjacency means daytime traffic and parking pressure during business hours. Easier scheduling on evenings and weekends.
For crawl space encapsulation, the service area covers roughly 40 miles from central Corpus Christi.
Common reasons to call
- A musty or damp smell keeps coming up through the floors of a pier-and-beam home
- Standing water, wet dirt, or high humidity is showing up under the house after Coastal Bend rains or flooding
- Floors feel cold, bouncy, or the home is hard to keep comfortable and energy bills are high
- A home inspection or a real estate sale flagged moisture, wood rot, or a torn old vapor barrier under the house
- Signs of mold, mildew, or fungus on the wood framing and subfloor in the crawl space
- Pests, rodents, or insects are getting into the crawl space and the owner wants it sealed off
Typical work
- Cleaning out the crawl space and laying a heavy plastic vapor barrier over the dirt floor and up the walls
- Full encapsulation that seals the floor and walls, tapes the seams, and closes off outside vents
- Adding a crawl space dehumidifier or sump pump to keep the sealed space dry over time
- Sealing and insulating the rim joist and crawl space walls to cut drafts and moisture
- Fixing or replacing a torn, old, or failed vapor barrier and clearing out debris left behind
Typical turnaround
Most homes are finished in one to three days once the crawl space is cleared and dry, though bigger jobs with drainage or repairs can take longer
Materials and equipment
- Reinforced polyethylene vapor barrier liner (often 10 to 20 mil)
- Seam tape and vapor barrier sealant or mastic
- Insulation board or spray foam for walls and rim joists
- Crawl space dehumidifier
- Sump pump and drainage tubing
- Vent covers and sealed access door
- Mechanical fasteners and termination strips
Job sizes
Minor
A small job such as inspecting the crawl space, patching a torn liner, or laying a basic vapor barrier over the dirt floor in a compact space
Standard
A typical single-family pier-and-beam home getting a full liner across the floor and walls with sealed seams and vents
Major
A large or difficult crawl space needing full encapsulation plus a dehumidifier, sump pump, wall insulation, and drainage work
Replacement
Tearing out an old failed system, doing cleanup or wood repair, and re-encapsulating the entire crawl space from scratch
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓A good pro inspects the crawl space and measures moisture first, instead of quoting a full sealed system before looking
- ✓They deal with any standing water, drainage problems, or existing rot before laying new material, not over the top of it
- ✓They explain what parts of the space they will seal, the liner thickness they use, and what the vents and walls will look like when done
- ✓They are honest when a home is on a slab and does not have a crawl space that needs this work
- ✓They put the scope, materials, and any warranty in writing so you know what is covered
- ✓They bring in a licensed electrician or plumber for any dehumidifier or pump tie-ins rather than doing that work unlicensed
General liability insurance, a moisture control or waterproofing warranty, and voluntary training or certification in crawl space and moisture control work; mold-related jobs may involve a licensed mold assessor or remediator
Common questions
Do homes in the Coastal Bend even have crawl spaces?
Many newer homes here sit on a concrete slab and have no crawl space at all. But plenty of older pier-and-beam homes, raised coastal homes, and additions do have a crawl space underneath, and those are the ones that can benefit from encapsulation.
What is crawl space encapsulation?
It means sealing off the space under your home with a heavy plastic liner over the ground and up the walls, taping the seams, and closing outside vents. The goal is to keep moisture, humidity, and pests out of the space so the wood and air above stay drier.
How is that different from just a vapor barrier?
A basic vapor barrier is a sheet of plastic laid over the dirt to slow moisture coming up from the ground. Full encapsulation seals the whole space, including the walls and vents, and often adds a dehumidifier or drainage. Encapsulation is the more complete, sealed version.
Will it help with moisture and mold under my house?
It is meant to lower the humidity and keep the ground moisture from soaking the wood, which helps stop new mold and rot. If there is already mold or rot present, that usually needs to be cleaned up or repaired first, sometimes by a separate mold or repair pro, before the space is sealed.
Do I need a dehumidifier or a sump pump too?
It depends on your crawl space. In our humid, flood-prone area many sealed crawl spaces do better with a dehumidifier, and one that takes on water may need a sump pump. A good pro will check your moisture levels and drainage before recommending either one.
What should I ask a pro before hiring?
Ask what thickness of liner they use, whether they seal the walls and vents or just the floor, how they handle any existing water or mold, and what warranty they offer. Ask if they carry liability insurance, and whether any electrical or plumbing tie-ins will be done by a licensed trade.
Should I seal the crawl space vents or leave them open?
That is a real debate and it depends on your home and climate. Full encapsulation usually closes the vents and controls humidity another way, while some setups keep vents. A good pro will explain the trade-offs for your specific home instead of giving a one-size answer.