
Burley Insulation serves Eden, ID with spray foam insulation, attic insulation, and crawl space upgrades for older wood-frame homes and farmsteads in Twin Falls County - with replies within one business day and free on-site estimates.
Burley Insulation serves Eden, ID with spray foam insulation, attic insulation, and crawl space upgrades for older wood-frame homes and farmsteads in Twin Falls County - with replies within one business day and free on-site estimates.

Eden homes built in the 1950s through 1970s almost universally have uninsulated rim joists and band joists at foundation level - gaps where cold air and moisture move freely from the crawl space or basement up into the floor above. Closed-cell spray foam applied at these points seals the air path and adds an insulating layer in one step, which is the highest-impact fix for cold floors in many older homes on the Snake River Plain. See our spray foam insulation services.
At roughly 4,100 feet elevation, Eden sees consistent hard freezes from November through February. Original attic insulation from mid-century construction - typically fiberglass batts or early loose-fill - has usually compressed to a fraction of its original R-value after five or six decades, leaving the ceiling assembly far below what Idaho energy codes now require. Adding blown-in insulation on top of existing material is typically the fastest and most cost-effective way to close that gap.
Properties around Eden frequently have vented crawl spaces beneath wood-frame sections of the home, and those spaces accumulate cold, damp air during the long winter months. Insulating the perimeter walls of the crawl space with rigid foam or spray foam - rather than relying on batts stapled to the floor joists, which fall and sag over time - keeps the crawl space within a temperature range that protects the floor framing and the living space above it.
The volcanic soil and irrigated farmland surrounding Eden hold moisture that can work its way upward into crawl spaces through the ground surface, particularly in spring when snowmelt is running and the irrigation season is beginning. A heavy-duty polyethylene vapor barrier installed over the entire crawl space floor - lapped at seams and sealed at the foundation walls - stops that moisture from evaporating into the floor system where it can cause mold growth and wood decay.
Blown-in cellulose or fiberglass fills attic floor cavities more uniformly than batts and reaches areas that are difficult to access on properties with complex roof lines - common on Eden farmhouses with additions built at different times. It is the most practical way to bring an under-insulated attic up to current Idaho code levels without removing existing material or disturbing the interior of the home.
Eden sits on an open, flat plain with little natural windbreak, and wind-driven cold air infiltration through attic penetrations around light fixtures, plumbing chases, and wall top plates is a significant source of heat loss in older homes here. Sealing those penetrations with spray foam before adding blown-in insulation can reduce heating costs beyond what insulation alone achieves - and it directly addresses ice dam formation at roof eaves in winter.
Eden is a small unincorporated community in Twin Falls County, sitting at roughly 4,100 feet on the Snake River Plain. The high-desert climate here is demanding in both directions: winters bring consistent hard freezes from November through February, and summers swing to hot, dry conditions with intense UV exposure that degrades exterior materials faster than homeowners typically expect. The freeze-thaw cycles in late fall and early spring - where temperatures drop below freezing at night and recover during the day - are one of the most damaging forces on concrete, foundations, and the air seals around windows and doors. Most of the housing stock in and around Eden was built between the 1940s and 1970s, when Idaho had minimal energy codes. Homes from that era were constructed with no basement wall insulation, little to no crawl space protection, and attic insulation that made sense at 1960 energy prices but not at today's. Those homes are almost uniformly good candidates for insulation upgrades.
The agricultural character of the area around Eden adds factors that do not come up in suburban markets. Many properties include outbuildings, barns, or equipment storage in addition to the main house - and some homeowners want those structures insulated for livestock, equipment, or workspace use. The irrigated farmland surrounding the community means the soil stays moist through the growing season, which sustains ground moisture pressure against crawl spaces and foundations well into fall. Properties with large lots and gravel driveways also experience more frost heave than typical urban lots because there is less heat retention in the surrounding surface. These are conditions that an insulation contractor familiar with Twin Falls County will recognize on sight.
Our crew works throughout Eden and the surrounding Twin Falls County communities regularly, and we understand what insulation work looks like on the older ranch-style homes and farmsteads common to this part of the county. Most of the homes we encounter here were built when insulation was an afterthought, which means the job usually involves clearing out deteriorated material before new insulation can go in - not just adding on top of what is already there.
Eden sits about 15 miles northeast of Twin Falls, connected by Highway 25 and the surrounding county roads that serve the agricultural community. Building permits for work in this area are handled through Twin Falls County, and we coordinate those requirements before every project. The open, flat terrain here means wind exposure is real - we account for it when sealing crawl space vents and attic penetrations so that what we install actually holds up through winter.
We also regularly serve homeowners in Hansen, ID just to the east, as well as Hazelton, ID in Jerome County - so our crews are already running routes through this part of the Magic Valley.
Reach us by phone or through our online form and tell us what you are noticing - cold rooms, high bills, a damp crawl space. We respond within one business day and can usually schedule an on-site visit within the week.
We visit your property, inspect the attic, crawl space, basement, and any problem areas, and give you a written estimate before any work is agreed to. There is no charge for the assessment and no obligation to proceed - the estimate is what it is, with no add-ons after the fact.
We schedule the work at a time that fits your routine. Most single-scope jobs - an attic top-up or crawl space treatment - are completed in one day. Whole-home projects typically run two to three days. You do not need to be present for the full job.
When the work is done we walk through the completed areas with you, explain what was installed and where, and leave the property clean. If anything needs follow-up, we handle it - no waiting weeks for a callback.
We serve Eden, ID and the surrounding Twin Falls County area. Free estimates, honest pricing, replies within one business day.
(208) 679-8672Eden is a small unincorporated community in Twin Falls County, in south-central Idaho. With a population of fewer than 500 people, it sits on the wide, flat volcanic terrain of the Snake River Plain, surrounded by agricultural land that produces dairy, potatoes, sugar beets, and grain. The community has a quiet, rural character - most properties are detached single-family homes on larger lots, many with outbuildings or small farm structures that reflect the agricultural economy that has shaped this part of the county for generations.
The housing stock in Eden is predominantly wood-frame construction dating from the mid-20th century, when the expansion of irrigation farming across the Snake River Plain drove growth in small communities throughout Twin Falls County. These homes are well-built for their era but were constructed before meaningful Idaho energy codes - which means attic insulation, crawl space protection, and wall insulation are all common upgrade needs. Eden is about 15 miles northeast of Twin Falls, and most residents travel that route regularly for shopping and services. Neighbors to the east include Hazelton in Jerome County, and the nearby town of Hansen sits just to the south along U.S. Route 30.
Seal gaps and maximize energy efficiency with professional spray foam insulation.
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Learn MoreBlock moisture and protect your home with a crawl space vapor barrier.
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Learn MoreCall us today or submit a free estimate request - we respond within one business day and know exactly what homes in this part of Idaho need.