The homeowner noticed a persistent musty odour on the second floor and wanted it checked before it got worse. The house still had its original insulation — decades-old material sitting only a few inches deep over wood lath.
A musty smell with no visible source is one of the most common reasons GTA homeowners call us, and it almost always points up. This attic had no vapour barrier anywhere in the assembly — so attic air, and the musty odour it carried, was leaking straight down into the living space, while household moisture drifted up into the cold attic. Once wood stays damp, mold follows.


Our inspection confirmed it: mold staining across roughly 350 sq ft of the roof sheathing, insulation far below today’s R-60 standard, uninsulated knee-wall surfaces, blocked intake ventilation, and a bathroom exhaust that wasn’t venting properly to the exterior. And critically — no vapour barrier. With nothing separating the house from the attic, air moved freely in both directions: musty attic air seeping into the bedrooms, warm humid house air condensing on the cold roof. That finding drove the whole plan — it’s exactly why we specified closed-cell spray foam across the attic floor, to seal the ceiling and act as the vapour barrier this house never had.



This attic needed a full reset, not a top-up:




The musty smell is gone because the cause is gone: the mold was remediated and sealed, the moisture source was rerouted outside, and the new spray-foam vapour barrier keeps house air out of the attic. From a few inches of century-home insulation to a sealed R-60 assembly — covered by our 10-year workmanship warranty.


Every problem on this page was found during a free, no-obligation inspection. We photograph everything, walk you through it, and give you a straight answer — even if that answer is “your attic is fine.”