
Klamath Falls Insulation serves Keno, OR with air sealing, spray foam, attic insulation, and crawl space services - covering homes along the Klamath River corridor with free estimates and replies within one business day.

Keno homes built in the mid-20th century - which is most of the area - were never air sealed to modern standards, and decades of freeze-thaw cycling at roughly 4,000 feet have widened gaps around framing, pipes, and the building envelope. Our air sealing services address those entry points directly, reducing drafts and making insulation perform as intended - which matters especially in a rural community where heating costs run high through long winters.
Properties near the Klamath River in Keno deal with both hard winters and seasonal ground moisture, which makes closed-cell spray foam a strong choice for crawl spaces and rim joists. It insulates and seals in one step, and its moisture resistance is an advantage for homes on rural lots near the river where ground water rises during snowmelt season.
The attic is where most heat escapes in Keno homes during the long cold season from October through April. Original batt insulation installed in the 1950s and 1960s has settled and compressed over time, leaving the attic far below current Oregon code minimums. Adding or replacing attic insulation is the single highest-impact upgrade for comfort and heating costs in this area.
Many Keno homes have uninsulated crawl spaces with bare earth floors that let cold air and ground moisture move freely into the living space above. Insulating the crawl space floor and walls, combined with a vapor barrier, directly addresses cold floors in winter and protects the wood structure from long-term moisture damage.
Homes near the J.C. Boyle Reservoir corridor and along the Klamath River are more exposed to seasonal ground moisture than properties elsewhere in the county. Installing a vapor barrier in the crawl space blocks moisture from the ground before it can reach wood framing - a necessary first step before any crawl space insulation work proceeds.
For Keno homeowners who want to boost attic performance without a full removal-and-replacement project, blown-in insulation is a practical option. It fills around existing framing and settles into irregular spaces that batts miss, making it a cost-effective upgrade for the older rural homes common in this part of western Klamath County.
Keno is an unincorporated community along the Klamath River, roughly 20 miles west of Klamath Falls, sitting at about 4,000 feet in elevation. That elevation means cold winters with sustained freezes from November through early spring, freeze-thaw cycles that crack concrete and open gaps in building envelopes, and hot dry summers with intense UV that degrades exterior materials faster than in lower-elevation communities. Most homes in Keno were built between the 1940s and 1970s, well before Oregon adopted modern insulation and energy code requirements, and many have never been upgraded.
The proximity to the Klamath River and J.C. Boyle Reservoir adds a moisture dimension that most inland properties do not face. Ground moisture near the river can enter crawl spaces, and seasonal flooding risk means vapor control is not optional for homes on lower-lying lots. The housing stock here is a mix of wood-frame single-family homes, manufactured homes, and rural properties with outbuildings - each requiring different approaches to insulation and air sealing. Manufactured homes make up a meaningful share of the Keno-area housing stock, and they have specific belly-wrap and floor-insulation needs that site-built homes do not.
Our crew works throughout Keno and the Klamath River corridor regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect insulation work here. The homes we encounter in Keno are predominantly older wood-frame construction and manufactured homes on large rural lots - the type of properties where air leakage and inadequate crawl space coverage are the norm rather than the exception. We plan our drives to Keno as full workdays so we can assess and complete a job in a single trip rather than making multiple visits.
Keno sits along Oregon Route 66 in western Klamath County, with the Klamath River running alongside the community and J.C. Boyle Reservoir just upstream. The area is known to locals for its river access and proximity to the Cascade-Siskiyou zone. Permits for work in Keno fall under Klamath County, which administers building permits through its Community Development Department. We serve the full western Klamath County corridor, including Worden to the southeast, and handle permit coordination whenever a project requires one.
Reach us by phone or the contact form and we reply within one business day. We ask a few questions about your home and what you are noticing - drafts, high bills, cold floors - then schedule an on-site visit at a time that works for you.
A contractor visits your property, inspects the attic, crawl space, and any other areas of concern, and identifies where air leakage and insulation gaps are losing you heat. You get a written estimate with no cost and no obligation.
We arrive with all materials and equipment and complete the job in one visit for most single-area projects. Spray foam work includes a specific re-entry window we give you before starting so you can plan around it.
We walk through the finished work with you so you can see what was done and where. Any questions after we leave get a prompt response, and we stand behind our work if anything needs adjustment.
We serve Keno and the Klamath River corridor - free estimate, written quote, no pressure. Reply within one business day.
(458) 254-8018Keno is a small unincorporated community in western Klamath County, Oregon, situated along the Klamath River about 20 miles west of Klamath Falls. The community sits at approximately 4,000 feet in elevation in the high desert zone where the Cascade foothills begin to drop toward the Klamath Basin. Most of the land in and around Keno is rural and open, with properties ranging from small residential lots near the river to larger rural parcels on the surrounding hillsides. Housing in the area is modest - primarily older wood-frame homes and manufactured housing on large lots, with outbuildings and agricultural structures common on the bigger parcels.
J.C. Boyle Reservoir, just upstream on the Klamath River, is a local landmark that draws anglers and outdoor enthusiasts year-round. The community is connected to Klamath Falls via Oregon Route 66, which also links it to the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument to the west. Homeowners in Keno are practical and self-reliant - they tend to defer smaller maintenance items but act decisively when a problem like heat loss or moisture becomes hard to ignore. We also serve nearby communities including Klamath Falls to the east, and cover the full western corridor of the county.
Creates an airtight seal that dramatically cuts heating and cooling costs.
Learn MoreInsulates basement walls and rim joists for a warmer, drier lower level.
Learn MoreHigh-density foam with superior R-value and moisture resistance.
Learn MoreLightweight foam that expands to fill irregular spaces cost-effectively.
Learn MoreCommercial-grade insulation for offices, warehouses, and retail spaces.
Learn MoreHeavy-duty barrier that blocks ground moisture from entering your crawl space.
Learn MoreProfessional vapor barrier placement to protect against condensation damage.
Learn MoreWe drive to Keno regularly and reply within one business day. Get a written quote with no obligation before any work begins.