Middle Island Home Inspection Services

Home Inspection Middle Island 11953

Looking for an experienced Suffolk County home inspector in Middle Island with hands-on experience in the trades? 


You have come to the right place.


Meticulous Home inspection has been in business since 2005 and is a full service inspection company. We have inspected several homes in Middle Island and the surrounding areas of Suffolk County on Long Island.


A typical home inspection starts outside the house, and one of the first things we mention is grading and drainage around the house. Soil around the house, and all walks and driveways should be pitched away from the house so water does not pool against the foundation as this can cause water intrusion issues, and foundation cracks.


Foundation issues are photographed and also included in the report, and signs of water entry such as efflorescence (white chalky powder on concrete from water intrusion) and water stains are documented. Insufficient support is regularly found in old homes during an inspection.


We enter crawl spaces if it is safe to do so, and determine if enough air circulation is present. We often find crawl spaces are not insulated or have insulation installed upside down which is a common defect.


Everything from roofing/siding, to doors/windows, as well as attached decks, garages, landscaping and retaining walls are checked. We examine steps and railings and look for trip hazards, and railings that are loose or too low. Damaged walks and patios are also mentioned, as well as too much growth against the house which can foster termite activity.


Gutters and leaders are checked, as well as the chimney or exhaust piping for gas heating equipment. We have found damaged bricks, a lack of a concrete crown atop the chimney bricks, as well as rusted exhaust piping on the roof that is in need of replacement.


We examine the boiler and baseboards/radiators, or the furnace and its ductwork and registers, and generally recommended service to heating equipment by a licensed contractor. 


Oil tanks are also part of the home inspection, and many are poorly supported, or not installed properly, or are too old and can rust from the inside due to condensation that forms within the tank.


We also regularly find oil tanks that are/were located underground and if so, we recommend the property be checked for underground oil leaks/contamination as this can be extremely expensive to remediate.


The service panel is always opened to see wiring inside the panel to determine if any issues exist such as vintage ungrounded wiring or double tapped circuit breakers. We explain and demonstrate GFI receptacles to you so you know how to test them, and if the home does not have these safety devices, it is logged into your report. 


GFI receptacles (with the reset buttons) should exist in all 'wet' areas such as outdoor areas, kitchen counters/islands, bathrooms, laundry areas, and even in garages. Exterior receptacles should have modern in-use covers installed if not already in place.


Staircases and railings inside the home are also checked as we often find staircases with varying steps or railings that are too low. We determine if any trip hazards exist, as well as low headroom in stairwells that could cause injury. Older homes sometimes have railings that have too much space between balusters, and generally recommend updating if too antiquated.


Older homes from the 1960's and previous are known to have galvanized steel drain piping which rusts internally causing slow drainage, and we generally recommend updating of this original drain piping. Some houses also have a galvanized water main pipe which has the same problem - internal rust which can affect water pressure.


Houses from the 1920's-30's can also have a lead water main which we always recommend updating, but this can be a costly update. We check for leaks at valves and pipe connections, and check for proper operation of all plumbing fixtures like sinks, tubs and showers, as well as shower doors and bathroom exhaust fans - many of which we find are improperly installed.


Appliances are tested for basic function and we evaluate kitchen and bathroom exhaust fans to be sure they are properly vented to the exterior - not the attic or other areas where moisture can be trapped causing issues like mold.


Near the end of the inspection we operate the heating and cooling systems to determine their functionality, and log in any defects or deficiencies found. 


So if you need an experienced home inspector with hands-on background for a home inspection in Middle Island, Meticulous Home Inspection is quite familiar with this area, and all these issues, and more.


We are available 7 days a week, so don't be ridiculous, call Meticulous at 631 902 6761.

A little about Middle Island

The European-American history of Middle Island goes back at least to 1766, when the first Presbyterian church was built. Rev. David Rose, who was also a doctor and a pastor of the South Haven church, covered his immense parish on horseback. He filled his saddle bags with Bibles and medicines to minister to his frontier congregation. In 1766 the parish opened a cemetery just across from the church.


Around the same time, a veteran of the French and Indian War named Jonathan Edwards who admired the white pine trees of Quebec swiped the seedlings for himself and began planting them along what is today Middle Island-Miller Place Road. Many of these pine trees were spread throughout the community. A local farmer named William Dayton swiped some of the pine cones from the site of the original plantings in 1812 and brought them to his farm south of what is today Middle Country Road, towards an area of Yaphank-Middle Island Road north of Longwood Road. The area near the William Davis farmstead is now part of Prosser Pines and Cathedral Pines County Parks.


The first schoolhouse was built in 1813 east of the church. In 1837, a new church was built just to the rear of the older one. It served the community for 200 years until the new Christian Education building was built at the Longwood Estate in 1966.


For over 100 years (until it was burned down in 1971), Pfeiffer's Store was a center of activity for Middle Island and surrounding communities. A nearby lake, known as Corwin's Pond, was renamed "Artist Lake" after painter Alonzo Chappel settled there in 1869.

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