Providing Whole Home Inspections & Consulting Services
across Westchester & Orange Counties, NY and Fairfield County, CT
A home inspection in Pleasantville, NY has to answer for age first: more than a third of the village’s homes were built before 1940, and a house that old carries layered electrical work and drainage quirks no listing sheet mentions.
The full evaluation once your offer is accepted: structure, roof, electrical, plumbing, heating and cooling, insulation, and how the lot moves water around the foundation. In a village where the median house dates to the mid-1950s, Chris spends his time where age actually shows, then documents all of it with photos in your report.
A shorter look before you commit to a bid, which matters when a Pleasantville listing draws multiple offers and pressure to waive contingencies. Chris walks the house alongside you and points out what a full inspection would dig into, so any risk you accept is one you understand.
The complete top-to-bottom examination for buyers already in contract. Chris opens the panel, runs every system, and probes the spots where moisture likes to hide in older frames. Each finding gets explained to you on the spot rather than saved for the report.
Fresh drywall hides mistakes as well as old plaster does. For new builds and gut renovations in and around Pleasantville, Chris verifies the work before you close, from flashing details to whether the mechanicals were actually commissioned, and documents anything the builder still owes you.
An inspection before your house hits the market, so nothing in the buyer's report ambushes you at the negotiating table. Sellers of older village homes use it to repair the small stuff cheaply and price the rest into the listing on their own terms.
A periodic checkup for owners who plan to stay put. Plenty of Pleasantville houses have passed the century mark, and an annual look at the roof, grading, and mechanicals catches slow problems, a damp sill or a tiring boiler, while they are still small repairs.
Plenty of inspectors will drive to Pleasantville. Here is what changes when Chris is the one who shows up.
Pleasantville rewards an inspector who has worked across eras. Victorian and pre-war houses cluster near the Metro-North station, postwar capes and splits fill the streets beyond them, and just over the village line in Mount Pleasant sits Usonia, the cooperative community master-planned with Frank Lloyd Wright in the late 1940s, where flat roofs and radiant slab heat are the norm. A full home inspection here has to read each construction type on its own terms, and Chris gives converted steam systems and retrofitted ductwork the same scrutiny in his heating and cooling evaluations.
Scheduling is the quiet advantage. Instead of hiring separate vendors across separate weeks, Chris performs the general inspection, radon testing, a mold assessment, and water quality sampling during a single appointment, with the HVAC evaluation folded in. Everything lands in the same report, and your contingency window only has to absorb a single visit.
We also inspect homes in Chappaqua and North Castle, plus every other town we cover.
Five patterns worth checking first in a village where the median house dates to the 1950s.
About 36 percent of Pleasantville's housing predates 1940, and houses that old often carry several generations of electrical work: knob-and-tube remnants, mid-century circuits, and modern additions all feeding one panel. Chris traces what is accessible and flags the splices, undersized circuits, and capacity problems a quick panel glance would miss.
The village maintains the sanitary sewer mains, but the lateral running from your house to the street belongs to the homeowner, and on pre-war blocks it is frequently the original clay or cast iron pipe. Chris checks the visible drain plumbing for slow fixtures and backup staining, then tells you when a camera scoping is worth ordering before closing.
A foundation poured in 1925 was built to hold the house up, not to keep water out, and many older village basements show it after a hard rain. Chris looks for efflorescence, staining at the sill line, and downspouts dumping against the foundation, then separates a fix that takes a Saturday of regrading from one that needs a drainage contractor.
The EPA's radon map places Westchester in Zone 3, its lowest predicted county average, and that label is exactly why buyers here skip the test. A county average says nothing about the soil under one particular foundation, and the EPA advises testing every home regardless of zone. Chris sets the radon test during the inspection so the result comes back before your contingency runs out.
Pleasantville's drinking water arrives from the New York City supply system, treated before it ever reaches the main. The unknowns sit on your side of the curb: the age and material of the service line and the house plumbing. The village compiled a full service line inventory for New York State in 2024 for good reason. Chris samples at the tap so you know what the house itself adds to the water.
The questions Pleasantville buyers actually ask before they book.
Schedule Your InspectionReal Google reviews from clients of Longs GCS Home Inspections.
“Chris Longs did an excellent home inspection for my Buyers. I am a Realtor of 39 years and I know an excellent home inspector when I see one and Chris is definitely a good one! Polite, knowledgeable, right on time and very efficient. He was able to answer all my buyers question. I recommend Chris Longs Home Inspections!”
Lynn SimmonsGoogle review
“Amazing work from Chris! Gave me the confidence before committing to the house. Very knowledgeable and super nice person!”
Luiza FontesGoogle review
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The guides we hand clients most often, along with our own service pages.