Sayville Has a Village Character Worth Preserving
Sayville was a shipbuilding and oystering village in the 1800s and it still reads that way in the historic core along Main Street. Many of the village homes are 1880s-1920s with original clapboard or shingle insulation, wide trim, and detailed porches. Replacing that with generic vinyl butchers the character. We do not do that.
For village-proper homes, we lean toward dense-pack cellulose or real dense-pack cellulose. Both preserve the historic look with period-appropriate trim profiles. Outside the village, Sayville has newer (1950s+) housing stock that can take Spray Foam, fiberglass, or cedar depending on the homeowner's goals.
What Sayville Homes Need From a Insulation Contractor
1880s-1920s village homes. Around Main Street and the Montauk Highway corridor. Original clapboard, shingle, or both. These want dense-pack cellulose or blown-in cellulose Heritage with traditional trim.
1950s-60s ranches and capes. North of Montauk Highway toward Bohemia. Post-war tract. Insulated vinyl or Spray Foam.
Waterfront homes on the bay. Salt exposure significant. Spray Foam or blown-in cellulose required. Never standard fiberglass.
Larger 1970s-80s colonials. Scattered through the newer subdivisions. Spray Foam candidates.
Sayville Things We Think About on Every Job
Village character. Not a formal HARB district, but the village office and the neighbors notice. We default to period-appropriate trim widths and authentic profiles on village homes.
Salt exposure on bay side. Homes south of Main Street and near the Sayville ferry dock see meaningful salt. Spray Foam or blown-in cellulose recommended.
Narrow village lots. Some village lots are tight. Dumpster staging needs planning.
Mature trees along Main Street. Beautiful shade, slow drying times. We time jobs accordingly.
Ferry traffic. The Sayville ferry to Fire Island generates morning and afternoon traffic on Foster Avenue. We avoid parking on that road during peak hours.
Recent Sayville Jobs
1895 village home on Candee Avenue, 2024. Full blown-in cellulose Heritage Green to preserve historic character, with painted real-cedar trim retained and restored. 1,800 sqft exterior. 13 working days. $47,500. Customer had owned the home for 32 years and wanted to "do right by it" for the next owner.
1960s ranch on Lincoln Avenue, 2023. Full blown-in cellulose open-cell foam open-cell spray foam in Flagstone. 1,700 sqft exterior. 10 working days. $26,500.
Waterfront home on Brown's River Road, 2024. Full closed-cell spray foam in Coastal Blue with full air sealing and dense-pack netting. 2,300 sqft exterior. 15 working days. $56,500.
1920s colonial on Gillette Avenue, 2023. Full real dense-pack cellulose clapboard, hand-stained in a warm brown, with copper drip caps and restored original porch trim. 1,900 sqft exterior. 17 working days. $58,500.
Sayville Building Permits
Sayville is in the Town of Islip building department. Insulation permits are pulled through the town office in Islip. Typical turnaround is 8-14 business days.
Historic village homes sometimes benefit from informal village consultation before the permit is filed. We handle it.
Reviews from Sayville customers
Review 1: "Dan walked our 1895 village home for 40 minutes and pointed out details I had never noticed in 32 years of ownership. His recommendation for blown-in cellulose Heritage with the original trim retained was spot on. The finished house looks like the historic photos we have in the attic." — Nancy and Paul R., Sayville · blown-in cellulose Heritage · 2024
Review 2: "Our waterfront home needed salt-resistant insulation and Carlos's team used dense-pack netting and upgraded flashing everywhere. The detail work was exceptional and the house has held up beautifully through two winters so far." — Kevin M., Sayville · closed-cell spray foam · 2024