
Drafty walls and a hard-working furnace cost you money every Roseburg winter. Open-cell foam expands to fill every gap, stopping air leaks and slowing heat loss at the same time.

Open-cell foam insulation in Roseburg is sprayed as a liquid that expands up to 100 times its volume, filling every gap before firming into a continuous insulating layer - most residential jobs are completed in one to two days with no drywall removal required.
In Roseburg, where cool, damp winters run from October through March, a home that leaks air through gaps in walls and attics costs more to heat every single month. Traditional fiberglass batts can slow heat transfer, but they cannot fill irregular cavities, gaps around pipes, or corners where air sneaks through. Open-cell foam does - it expands into every void and cures into a seamless barrier. Many homeowners in Roseburg also find that the foam makes their home noticeably quieter, since the same continuous seal that stops drafts also reduces sound from outside.
For homes with specific areas needing maximum moisture protection - like crawl spaces or rim joists - pairing open-cell foam walls and attics with spray foam insulation in those zones gives you the best coverage for Roseburg conditions.
If your furnace runs constantly from November through February and your energy bills keep rising, your home may be losing heat through under-insulated or unsealed walls and attic. Roseburg's long, wet winters mean a poorly insulated home pays a real price in dollars every year. This is one of the most common reasons homeowners here call an insulation contractor.
If one side of your house - often a north-facing wall or a room above the garage - stays noticeably colder than the rest, air is moving through gaps in the insulation or the insulation is too thin. Open-cell foam fills those gaps completely once sprayed, eliminating the cold spots that fiberglass batts simply cannot reach after installation.
Homes built in Roseburg before modern energy codes often have walls with little or no insulation and attics with only a few inches of old, compressed material. If you have never had an energy audit or insulation inspection, and your home is more than 40 years old, you are likely heating the outdoors every winter.
When warm indoor air meets a cold, poorly insulated wall, moisture can condense inside the wall cavity. In Roseburg's damp climate, that moisture has nowhere to go. Over time it can lead to mold and wood rot you cannot see. A musty winter smell or moisture on interior walls near exterior surfaces is a sign worth investigating.
We install open-cell foam in walls, attics, and above-grade rim joists for both existing homes and new construction. For existing homes, we access wall cavities through small holes in siding or drywall - the foam fills each cavity completely and cures before we patch and leave. Attic applications use the foam to cover the roof deck or attic floor, creating a continuous thermal layer that covers irregular framing, pipes, and penetrations that batts would leave exposed.
When comparing foam types, open-cell is softer, vapor-permeable, and more affordable per board foot than commercial insulation grade rigid systems or closed-cell spray foam. It suits above-grade walls and attics in Roseburg's climate well - and for homes that also need crawl space coverage, we can combine foam types to match each zone's moisture conditions.
Best for existing homes where you want full wall coverage without removing drywall or siding.
The right choice for attics where you need to seal every penetration and cover irregular framing in one pass.
Suited for homes where air leaks at the foundation line are causing cold floors and energy loss.
Ideal for builders who want foam performance in open-framed walls before drywall goes up.
Roseburg sits in the Umpqua Valley and receives roughly 33 inches of rain per year, with cool, damp winters that run from October through March. Homes that are poorly sealed or under-insulated lose heat steadily during those months, and furnaces work harder than they should. Open-cell foam is particularly effective here because it insulates and air-seals in the same step - stopping both heat loss through the wall material and the air movement through gaps that traditional insulation leaves open. For homeowners served by Pacific Power, qualifying insulation upgrades may be eligible for cash rebates through Energy Trust of Oregon - ask before your project starts so the work is structured to qualify.
Homeowners in Myrtle Creek, OR and Winston, OR face many of the same conditions as Roseburg - older wood-frame homes, damp winters, and housing stock that predates meaningful insulation requirements. We serve the full Douglas County area and bring the same assessment approach to every home, regardless of town. A quick site visit is the fastest way to find out what your specific walls and attic actually have in them.
For information on spray foam installation standards, visit the Spray Polyurethane Foam Alliance. For current rebate details in Douglas County, see Energy Trust of Oregon.
When you reach out, we ask a few basic questions - the age of your home, which areas you want insulated, and whether any work has been done before. We reply within one business day and can typically schedule an in-home visit within a few days.
We walk your attic, walls, or crawl space, measure the areas to be insulated, and check for moisture or existing material. You get a written estimate before anything is agreed to - no verbal quotes, no surprises.
The crew arrives with spray equipment, protects nearby surfaces, and applies foam in controlled passes - you can watch it expand and firm up within seconds. Most Roseburg residential jobs are completed in one day, with larger attics occasionally taking two.
After spraying, the area needs to air out - typically 24 hours for residential jobs. Your contractor gives you the exact re-entry time before work begins. Once the foam is cured, we walk you through the finished work so you can see the coverage before we close anything up.
Free estimate, no obligation. We reply within one business day and can usually schedule your site visit within the week.
(458) 803-7783Oregon requires every contractor performing home improvement work to hold a current Construction Contractors Board license. We are licensed, bonded, and insured - you can verify our license on the Oregon CCB website before you sign anything. That accountability matters when someone is spraying foam inside your walls.
We have worked on homes across Douglas County, including the older wood-frame homes common in Roseburg neighborhoods built from the 1940s through 1970s. That experience means we know what to look for in older construction - irregular framing, moisture-prone crawl spaces, and cavities that need a specific approach.
Pacific Power serves most of Douglas County, and qualifying insulation upgrades may be eligible for rebates through Energy Trust of Oregon. We know the installation requirements and can structure your job to meet them - so the rebate you were counting on actually comes through after the work is done.
Every job starts with a site visit and a written estimate that lays out exactly what we found, what we recommend, and what it costs. There are no verbal quotes that shift after the crew arrives, and no surprises added to the invoice on the day we finish.
Our combination of local experience, licensing, and rebate program familiarity means you are not just getting foam sprayed - you are getting work done correctly for the specific conditions in your home. That is what makes the difference between a job that holds up and one that creates problems down the road.
Insulation solutions for Roseburg commercial buildings, from small retail spaces to larger properties with full envelope upgrades.
Learn MoreSpray foam for Roseburg homes and crawl spaces where maximum air sealing and moisture protection are the priority.
Learn MoreRoseburg's heating season starts in October - schedule your assessment now and go into winter with walls and attics that actually do their job.