
A poorly insulated commercial building costs you money every month in wasted heating and cooling. We install the right insulation for your building type, handle permits, and get the work done with minimal disruption to your operations.

Commercial insulation in Moses Lake slows heat movement through your building walls, roof, and floor - keeping warmth inside in winter and heat outside in summer - with most mid-sized projects completed in one to two days and minimal disruption to your operations.
If your building is uncomfortable for employees or customers, if certain rooms are always too hot or cold, or if your utility bills seem high for the size of your space, there is a good chance your current insulation is not keeping up. Many commercial buildings in Moses Lake were constructed before the 1990s, when energy standards were far less demanding than they are today.
Commercial insulation pairs directly with spray foam insulation when air sealing is a priority, making the two services natural complements for building owners who want both thermal performance and draft control in one project.
If your energy costs have gone up over the past few years but your usage habits have not changed, deteriorating or insufficient insulation is one of the most common causes. In Moses Lake's climate - running heat hard in winter and air conditioning hard in summer - a building losing conditioned air is expensive to operate.
When one part of your building is always uncomfortable no matter how hard the HVAC runs, the insulation in that area is likely thin, damaged, or missing. In Moses Lake, where summer temperatures can push past 100 degrees, a poorly insulated south- or west-facing wall can make a room genuinely unusable in the afternoon.
Any place where outside air is getting in is a place where your insulation system has a gap. In the Columbia Basin, where spring winds can be strong and persistent, even small gaps become noticeable. Run your hand along the base of exterior walls or near electrical outlets on outside walls - if you feel moving air, insulation and air sealing can fix it.
A large share of Moses Lake's older commercial buildings were constructed when energy standards were far less demanding than today. If your building dates from before the 1990s and has never had an insulation assessment, there is a reasonable chance it is significantly under-insulated by current standards. Age alone is a good reason to have someone take a look.
We work on offices, warehouses, retail spaces, agricultural buildings, and mixed-use properties throughout the Moses Lake area. Depending on the building and area being insulated, we use blown-in loose fill, spray foam, or rigid board panels. For projects where spray foam is the right fit, our spray foam insulation service handles both open- and closed-cell applications. For buildings that need moisture control alongside insulation, we can incorporate a crawl space vapor barrier as part of the same project scope.
We handle the permit application if one is required, coordinate the inspection, and give you a clean paper trail when the job is done. You do not need to learn the Grant County permitting process - we manage it for you.
Well-suited for attics and wall cavities in office buildings and retail spaces where cost-effective coverage is the priority.
Best for buildings where air sealing and insulation need to happen together - warehouses, older commercial spaces, and any area with significant air leakage.
Used in flat roof assemblies and exterior wall systems where continuous insulation is required to meet current energy code.
For older Moses Lake commercial buildings that need a comprehensive upgrade to reach modern performance levels without a full renovation.
Moses Lake sits in the Columbia Basin, where summer temperatures regularly climb above 100 degrees and winter nights drop well below freezing. That is a much wider temperature range than most of western Washington experiences, and it means the insulation in your commercial building has to perform in both directions - keeping heat out in July and locking it in during January. Many of the commercial buildings in Moses Lake were built before modern energy standards took effect. The gap between what those buildings have and what is now achievable is often large enough to pay for an upgrade faster than most owners expect.
The Columbia Basin's low humidity and persistent spring winds add another layer of complexity. High winds drive air through gaps in building envelopes aggressively, which means air sealing alongside insulation is not optional - it is necessary. We serve commercial clients across the region, including businesses in George and Othello, and we understand the building stock and climate conditions that shape commercial insulation work in eastern Washington.
We ask about your building size, age, and what prompted your call. You will hear back within one business day to schedule a site visit. No commitment needed at this stage.
We walk your building and look at the areas most likely to need attention - the attic or roof space, exterior walls, and crawl spaces if applicable. At the end of the visit, we give you a clear picture of what we found and what we recommend.
Within a few days you receive a written estimate breaking down labor and materials. If the project requires a Grant County permit - common for commercial work - we tell you at this stage and handle the application ourselves.
We complete the work systematically, typically in one to two days for a mid-sized building. If a permit was pulled, a county inspector verifies the work meets code. We walk you through the completed areas and hand you the paperwork when done.
Free on-site assessment. Written estimate. No obligation. We explain what we found and what it would take to fix it before you decide anything.
(509) 761-4252Commercial insulation projects in Grant County often require a permit, and navigating that process is not something most building owners want to manage themselves. We handle the application, coordinate with the county, and make sure the inspection clears - so you get a clean paper trail without learning a new process.
We are registered with the Washington State Department of Labor and Industries and carry the bonding and insurance required by state law. You can verify our license at the L&I contractor lookup before you call. Checking takes about 30 seconds and confirms we are authorized to work on your building.
A meaningful share of Moses Lake's commercial buildings were built in the mid-20th century, and they have specific quirks - thinner walls, older framing, and insulation that was never adequate by today's standards. We have worked on enough of these buildings to know what to look for and what approach actually holds up over time.
One of the most common concerns building owners have is paying for insulation they cannot see once it is covered up. We document the work with photos before anything is closed, walk you through what was installed, and welcome the county inspection that comes with permitted commercial work. You get proof, not just a promise.
Hiring for commercial insulation is a bigger decision than a residential job - more square footage, more at stake, and more moving parts on the permit side. We treat it that way, and we give you the documentation and accountability to match. The North American Insulation Manufacturers Association sets the industry standards we work from on every commercial project.
Washington State energy code requirements for commercial buildings are managed by the Washington State Department of Commerce. Grant County commercial permit information is available through the Grant County Building Department.
Moisture control for commercial buildings with crawl spaces - often installed alongside insulation to protect the building envelope from the ground up.
Learn MoreOpen- and closed-cell spray foam for commercial spaces where air sealing and insulation need to happen in a single application.
Learn MoreEvery month a building runs under-insulated is a month you are paying more than you need to. Call today or request a free estimate and get on our schedule before the busy season fills up.