Lennox Air Duct Cleaning in Fairfax Station, MD | Apex Air Duct Cleaning Maryland
Independent Lennox air duct cleaning in Fairfax Station typically runs $350–$850 for a full residential system, with same-day service available when mold or wildlife debris is blocking airflow. We serve Fairfax Station as owner-operated specialists — Robert Garcia works the equipment himself, not a subcontracted crew — and we carry OEM-compatible Lennox filters and seals for fast turnaround without the dealer markup. Call (855) 301-6549 for a free estimate.
Fairfax Station’s wooded estate properties put unusual strain on Lennox HVAC systems. The humidity pocket near the Occoquan Reservoir, the mature oak canopy dropping pollen and organic matter, and the wildlife pressure on homes backing to forest — these aren’t abstract concerns here. They’re what we find inside ductwork on job after job. We’ve spent 14 years cleaning Lennox systems across Maryland, and Fairfax Station consistently presents the most biologically active duct conditions we see in Fairfax County.
Why Fairfax Station Residents Choose Us for Lennox Service
Robert Garcia grew up in Silver Spring, Maryland, spending weekends near Sligo Creek Park before enrolling in the HVAC and Sheet Metal Technology program at Montgomery College in Rockville. He picked up air duct cleaning work straight out of that program and has spent the last 14 years doing it hands-on across Maryland. Robert runs Apex Air Duct Cleaning himself alongside a small crew he’s trained personally. His wife finally talked him into getting a newer vacuum rig two years ago — she was right, it cuts job time and the results are noticeably cleaner.
That matters for Fairfax Station Lennox owners because this isn’t standard suburban ductwork. Homes here average 3,500–6,000 square feet with multi-zone systems and duct runs stretching 80–150 feet through attics and crawlspaces. The original fiberglass-lined flex duct installed in the 1970s and 1980s degrades differently here than in drier climates. We’ve cleaned Lennox G50 gravity furnaces, G51MP units, SL28XCV air conditioners, and CBX32MV air handlers — enough to know which components fail first in this humidity.
We use Rotobrush and Nikro extraction systems, not shop-vac conversions. For containment, we run Abatement Technologies equipment to prevent cross-contamination during service. When we find degraded Lennox duct liner, we adjust vacuum pressure to avoid tearing the material. When we find mold, we fog with antimicrobial treatments backed by Guardsman protocols. Robert handles it personally — ownership-level accountability on every Fairfax Station job.
Common Lennox Air Duct Cleaning Problems We Solve in Fairfax Station
- Fiberglass liner degradation in Lennox ductwork. Fairfax Station’s sustained humidity — fed by the Occoquan Reservoir and dense forest canopy — causes Lennox fiberglass duct liner to soften and shed particles into the airstream. We use HEPA vacuuming at reduced pressure to clean without stripping the liner, then assess whether sections need re-lining or sealing.
- Compacted oak pollen and mold in return plenums. The mature oak and hardwood cover around Fairfax Station releases pollen loads far heavier than open suburbs. Lennox return plenums in estate homes near the reservoir commonly accumulate compacted organic matter that standard cleaning misses. Our video inspection catches what visual checks don’t.
- Sagging flex-duct runs trapping debris in multi-zone systems. Fairfax Station’s large-lot homes often have Lennox multi-zone setups with long flex runs through unconditioned attic spaces. Over decades, these sag between supports and create debris traps that restrict airflow to upper floors. We map the runs with video scope before cleaning to identify sags that need re-supporting.
- Accelerated evaporator coil biofouling from wildlife debris. Homes backing to woods off Henderson Road and Ox Road frequently draw chipmunk and mouse nesting material into return grilles. Lennox evaporator coils in these systems show biofouling rates 2–3 times faster than in developed areas. Coil cleaning is non-negotiable here, not optional.
- Mold colonization between standard service intervals. The humidity pocket in Fairfax Station means mold takes hold in Lennox ductwork faster than the industry’s standard 3–5 year cleaning recommendation allows. We advise annual inspection for homes within a half-mile of the reservoir, with cleaning triggered by video findings rather than calendar.
Lennox Service in Fairfax Station: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Fairfax Station’s large-lot, heavily wooded character — dense mature oak and hardwood canopy covering estate-style properties near the Occoquan Reservoir watershed — creates an unusually high biological load of mold spores, pollen, and organic debris that infiltrates ductwork far more aggressively than in the open, denser suburbs just north in Burke or Springfield. Homes here sit in a humidity pocket fed by the reservoir and forest cover, making duct interiors a prime environment for mold colonization between service intervals.
For Lennox owners specifically, this means the fiberglass-lined duct common in 1970s–1990s installations degrades faster here than the equipment manual suggests. The SL28XCV’s variable-speed blower is designed to maintain consistent airflow, but it can’t compensate for flex-duct runs clogged with decades of pollen compaction or wildlife debris. We’ve pulled return plenums in Fairfax Station homes that looked like compost bins — not because the homeowner neglected maintenance, but because the local ecology overwhelms standard filtration. Clean ducts aren’t a luxury — they’re just what the system was supposed to have all along.
On a job off Henderson Road, our crew inspected a 1986 Lennox G51MP furnace paired with original flex-duct runs. The video scope revealed compacted chipmunk nesting debris and mold in the return plenum, a direct result of the home backing to woods. We performed a full system HEPA vacuum, antimicrobial fogging, and sealed the return grilles with bird guard to prevent re-entry. The homeowners reported immediate improvement in air quality and allergen reduction.
Lennox Models & Products We Service in Fairfax Station
We clean and service the full range of Lennox residential systems found in Fairfax Station’s housing stock:
- Lennox G50 — Gravity furnaces from the 1970s–1980s, common in original Fairfax Station builds with basement mechanical rooms and tall masonry chimneys
- Lennox G51MP — Mid-efficiency furnaces from the 1980s–1990s, often paired with original flex-duct distribution systems now showing age
- Lennox SL28XCV — Variable-capacity air conditioners in newer or upgraded Fairfax Station homes, requiring careful coil and blower cleaning to preserve efficiency ratings
- Lennox CBX32MV — Variable-speed air handlers with complex multi-zone controls, common in larger estate homes with 3–4 zone dampers
We stock OEM-compatible Lennox filters and motors for Fairfax Station jobs, but we’re direct about when replacement beats repair. A CBX32MV with a failed variable-speed drive and 20 years of runtime? New air handler. A G51MP with intact heat exchanger but clogged ductwork? Clean it, seal it, run it another five years. For non-critical components — duct sealing mastic, flex-duct repair sleeves — we use quality aftermarket materials that meet or exceed OEM specifications without the dealer markup.
Lennox Service Pricing in Fairfax Station
| Service | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Standard air duct cleaning (single-zone Lennox system, up to 15 vents) | $350–$550 |
| Large home / multi-zone Lennox system (16–30 vents, 3,500–6,000 sq ft) | $550–$850 |
| Lennox evaporator coil cleaning (add-on or standalone) | $180–$320 |
| Video inspection with written assessment | $95–$150 (credited toward cleaning if scheduled) |
| Antimicrobial fogging / air sanitizing | $150–$250 |
| Duct repair and sealing (per linear foot of accessible duct) | $8–$14 |
Fairfax Station’s larger homes and complex zoning drive most jobs toward the upper half of these ranges. A 4,500-square-foot home with a Lennox multi-zone system and original flex-duct runs through a humid attic takes longer to clean properly than a compact ranch in Burke. Wildlife debris removal adds time — we’re thorough, not fast. Every estimate is free, in-home, and specific to your system. Call (855) 301-6549 to schedule; we’ll scope it with video and quote before any work begins.
Serving Fairfax Station, MD — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Fairfax Station area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Lennox Air Duct Cleaning in Fairfax Station
The humidity pocket near the Occoquan Reservoir and dense forest canopy creates mold colonization conditions 2–3 times faster than in open suburbs like Burke or Springfield. Lennox systems here — especially those with original fiberglass-lined duct — accumulate biological contamination faster than the standard 3–5 year interval allows. We recommend annual video inspection for Fairfax Station homes within a half-mile of the reservoir, with cleaning based on findings. Call (855) 301-6549 to schedule a free inspection.
Yes, with adjusted technique. We reduce vacuum pressure and use soft-bristle Rotobrush contact cleaning rather than aggressive agitation. Fiberglass liner in Fairfax Station’s humidity is already softened — the wrong approach tears it and releases fibers into your air. Our video inspection first assesses liner condition; if degradation is too advanced, we’ll recommend re-lining or replacement rather than risk damage. Call (855) 301-6549 for an assessment.
Yes, we clean coils as part of full system service, and it’s particularly necessary here. The sustained humidity and wildlife debris common in Fairfax Station homes backing to woods causes accelerated biofouling on Lennox evaporator coils. A dirty coil reduces efficiency, raises humidity further, and can trigger mold amplification throughout the duct system. Coil cleaning runs $180–$320 and is included in our comprehensive packages. Call (855) 301-6549 for pricing on your specific Lennox model.
We extract nesting material with HEPA-contained vacuum systems, then fog with antimicrobial treatment to address fecal contamination and mold spores. For homes off Henderson Road or Ox Road backing directly to woods, we also install bird guard or mesh on return grilles to prevent re-entry — standard screening often fails against determined chipmunks. The full process typically adds 60–90 minutes to service time. Call (855) 301-6549 if you’re hearing scratching or noticing unusual odors from your Lennox returns.
Sometimes. If uneven cooling stems from debris-blocked flex-duct runs or sagging lines trapping condensation, cleaning and re-supporting the duct restores balanced airflow. If the issue is damper malfunction, zone sensor failure, or undersized duct design, cleaning helps but won’t fully resolve it. We video-map your Lennox multi-zone system first to identify the root cause before recommending service. Call (855) 301-6549 for a diagnostic inspection — estimates are free.
Service Areas Near Fairfax Station
We serve Fairfax Station 22039 and surrounding communities from our Maryland base, including Silver Spring (Robert’s hometown, where we maintain a strong customer base), Gaithersburg (regular service for multi-zone systems in larger developments), Baltimore (commercial and residential duct cleaning across the metro), Forest Glen and Four Corners (older housing stock with similar vintage Lennox systems to Fairfax Station), and Takoma Park (historic homes with unique duct configurations). Travel to Fairfax Station is routine — we know the Ox Road corridor and the estate sections near the reservoir.
Book Your Lennox Service in Fairfax Station Today
Same-day service available for urgent mold or wildlife debris issues. Robert Garcia handles the work personally, with 14 years of experience and 254 verified reviews averaging 4.7 stars backing every job. Free estimates, upfront pricing, no pressure.
Call (855) 301-6549 now to schedule your Lennox air duct cleaning in Fairfax Station.
Written by Robert Garcia, Owner at Apex Air Duct Cleaning Maryland, serving Fairfax Station and communities across the region since 2010.