375 West Main Street, Palmyra, NY

A home built in 1915 is working with construction standards from an era when insulation was an afterthought and heating fuel was cheap. Walls in homes of this age almost never have cavity insulation - it simply wasn't standard practice. Windows are frequently original or early replacements, and the mechanical system has likely been converted at least once, often from coal to oil and then to natural gas. That conversion history matters because each change tends to leave behind oversized equipment and duct runs designed for a different fuel.

Cape Cod homes present a specific insulation challenge: the knee walls and sloped ceiling sections in the upper half-story create awkward cavities that are easy to miss during a retrofit. Homes of this style frequently have adequate attic insulation over the main floor but very little protecting the second-floor living space.

EcoAudit's estimate for this property is based on the typical housing stock in Palmyra and Onondaga County's climate zone 6A rather than confirmed building data. The actual energy profile depends heavily on what's inside the walls and attic - factors that only a walkthrough assessment can confirm. New York State and National Grid offer rebates that cover a meaningful share of weatherization costs for homeowners in Onondaga County. A free EcoAudit assessment identifies exactly where this home is losing energy and which programs apply.