Fast, Reliable Dryer Vent Cleaning Across Park Slope
Dryer vent cleaning in Park Slope typically costs $180–$340 for standard jobs, with complex brownstone rerouting running $450–$850, and most appointments are completed same-day. We’re Empire Air Duct Cleaning Service New York, and our Dryer Vent Cleaning team knows Park Slope’s 11215 zip code well — from the tree-lined streets near Prospect Park to the brownstone blocks between 7th and 8th Avenues. If you’re smelling burning lint, your dryer’s taking two cycles, or your vent cap’s clogged with debris, call (866) 952-5794. Steven Ramirez runs the job himself, and we’re usually at your door within hours.

Why Empire Air Duct Cleaning Service New York Is Park Slope’s Preferred Dryer Vent Cleaning Company
We’ve built our reputation in Park Slope one brownstone at a time. Nearly 1,000 customers reviewed us — 982 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars — and Park Slope property managers specifically call us back because we don’t send crews who’ve never seen a tin-ceiling cavity or a plaster-and-lath wall.
Steven runs the job himself. Same person who answers your call operates the Rotobrush and Nikro equipment on-site. No subcontractors guessing at your building’s quirks.
Our response time to Park Slope averages under two hours from call to arrival for urgent clogs. We carry vent caps, bird guards, and flex-duct fittings sized for the non-standard runs common in pre-war conversions — no waiting on parts.
Eleven years of one specialty means we’ve cleaned vents in converted co-ops on Montgomery Place, rerouted ducts through Carroll Street brownstones, and replaced caps on facades facing Prospect Park West. We know which buildings have the hidden plenum spaces, which blocks see the heaviest pollen loads off the park, and how to navigate ductwork that no modern engineer designed.
Our Dryer Vent Cleaning Services in Park Slope
Dryer Vent Inspection
Before we touch anything, we run a camera through your full vent run — and in Park Slope, that run is rarely straightforward. Original brownstones on streets like Berkeley Place or President Street often have vents snaked through tin-ceiling cavities or buried in masonry party walls. Our inspection identifies lint buildup, moisture damage, improper slopes, and structural issues that standard visual checks miss. We document everything so co-op boards and building managers have clear records.
Vent Cleaning & Lint Removal
Lint removal in Park Slope demands more than a shop vac. We use Rotobrush rotary systems and Nikro high-velocity vacuums designed for industrial applications — the same equipment commercial contractors rely on. The real challenge here isn’t the lint itself; it’s reaching it. Retrofit flex duct jammed through original plaster-and-lath walls creates sharp bends that trap debris for decades. We recently serviced a third-floor unit in a converted brownstone on 5th Street where the dryer vent was snaked through an original tin-ceiling cavity, packed with 30 years of lint and bird nesting material. Using our Rotobrush system, we cleared a clog that previous cleaners had missed because they couldn’t navigate the sharp 90-degree bends in the hidden plenum space.
Vent Rerouting
Some Park Slope vent runs are beyond cleaning — they’re fundamentally unsafe. When your duct was jury-rigged through a masonry wall in the 1980s conversion with no proper slope or insulation, rerouting is the only fix. We design new runs using proper materials, maintaining your brownstone’s integrity while meeting modern safety codes. This is labor-intensive work that generalist HVAC shops often refuse; we’ve specialized in it for 11 years.
Bird Guard Installation & Vent Cap Replacement
Park Slope’s historic rear facades — those charming back exposures facing gardens or alleys — were never designed with modern vent protection. Bird nests and squirrel debris are common blockages we find on Dean Street and Sterling Place. We install stainless steel bird guards that stop animals without restricting airflow, and we replace cracked or missing vent caps with models that blend visually with historic masonry. One call covers it all: cleaning, protection, and hardware.

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 Park Slope
We stock parts and use equipment from Honeywell, Aprilaire, and Guardsman — brands that hold up in Park Slope’s demanding retrofit environments. When your vent cap fails or your building’s air quality system needs integration, we don’t order and wait. Our truck carries the fittings, guards, and caps sized for the non-standard configurations common in 11215. That means same-day completion on most jobs, not a return visit that leaves your vent exposed.
Common Dryer Vent Cleaning Problems We See in Park Slope Homes
- Lint accumulation in inaccessible flex-duct runs through plaster-and-lath walls. The 1980s conversion wave stuffed flex duct into voids never meant for airflow. These sharp bends and narrow channels trap lint where standard brushes can’t reach, creating fire hazards invisible to residents.
- Moisture damage and mold growth inside uninsulated retrofit ductwork buried in original masonry party walls. NYC’s humid summers hit these buried ducts hard. Without proper insulation, condensation forms against old brick and stone, feeding mold that blows back into your laundry space.
- Bird nests and debris blocking vent caps in historic brownstone rear facades. Those picturesque rear gardens attract sparrows and squirrels. Uncapped or poorly screened vents on buildings along Prospect Park’s perimeter see heavier nesting activity than newer construction with integrated guards.
- Improper vent slopes causing water pooling in low spots. Retrofit runs often lack the 1/4-inch-per-foot slope code requires. Water collects, lint paste forms, and airflow chokes — a problem we find repeatedly in converted co-ops near Grand Army Plaza.
Pricing for Dryer Vent Cleaning in Park Slope, NY
Here’s what dryer vent cleaning costs in Park Slope’s market:
- Standard vent cleaning (accessible run, single-family or top-floor unit): $180–$240
- Deep cleaning with rotary brush and camera inspection: $260–$340
- Vent rerouting through brownstone walls or ceilings: $450–$850
- Bird guard installation: $120–$180
- Vent cap replacement with masonry-compatible hardware: $95–$150
- Co-op or multi-unit building with multiple vents: priced per run, typically $160–$220 each
What moves you up or down: length of run, number of bends, accessibility (tin-ceiling cavities take longer), whether we need to cut access panels in plaster, and if mold remediation is required. We give exact quotes before starting — estimates are free. Call (866) 952-5794.
We Also Serve Cities Near Park Slope
We regularly cross from Park Slope into Brooklyn, Kensington, Brooklyn Heights, and Flatbush for multi-building contracts and neighbor referrals. Same Steven-led service, same Rotobrush and Nikro equipment, same-day response throughout central Brooklyn.
Serving Park Slope, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Park Slope 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 — Dryer Vent Cleaning in Park Slope
Park Slope’s pre-1910 brownstones often have dryer vents routed through original tin-ceiling cavities or plaster-and-lath walls that were never designed for venting, creating sharp bends and hidden lint traps unique to this neighborhood’s retrofit era. Newer buildings have straight, accessible runs designed by engineers; Park Slope has improvised pathways stuffed into 130-year-old structural voids. That means longer cleaning times, specialized equipment, and technicians who won’t damage original finishes. Call (866) 952-5794 for a free inspection — we’ll show you exactly what your building has.
Every 12–18 months for 1980s conversions with retrofit ductwork, versus every 2–3 years for modern construction. The non-standard runs in Park Slope’s converted co-ops — flex duct through tin ceilings, sharp bends in masonry walls — accumulate lint faster and clean less thoroughly between services. If your unit’s on a floor with multiple bends or shares a run with neighbors, lean toward annual. Call (866) 952-5794 and we’ll assess your specific configuration.
Yes — we design runs that minimize structural intrusion, often using existing chases, floor joist spaces, or discrete exterior wall penetrations rather than cutting through original plaster and lath. Steven Ramirez evaluates each brownstone individually; some buildings allow clean new paths, others require surgical access through non-historic areas. We never recommend destructive routing through ornamental plaster or tin ceilings when alternatives exist. Free estimate: (866) 952-5794.
You’ll hear scratching or chirping, see debris falling from the exterior cap, smell organic decay, or notice sudden severe airflow reduction — often in spring when sparrows nest. Park Slope’s historic rear facades without modern guards are especially vulnerable, particularly on garden-facing exposures near Prospect Park. Don’t run your dryer; nesting material is highly flammable. Call (866) 952-5794 for same-day removal and guard installation.
Yes — a proper vent cap prevents animal entry, blocks rain and pollen, and improves dryer efficiency without visually disrupting historic masonry. We stock low-profile caps in finishes that blend with brownstone and brick, and we can match existing hardware on landmarked blocks. The cost ($95–$150) pays back in prevented clogs and fire risk reduction within a single year. Call (866) 952-5794 for options.
Written by Steven Ramirez, Owner and Lead Technician at Empire Air Duct Cleaning Service New York, serving Park Slope and Brooklyn since 2013.