Red Deer & the QE2 corridor
Weekly runs through Red Deer, Innisfail, Olds, Sylvan Lake, Lacombe and Ponoka — homes in town, barns and shops down the county roads.
Central Alberta is colder — and the math knows it
Red Deer averages about 5,450 heating degree-days a year to Calgary's ~5,000 — roughly 10% more winter. Same house, same attic, same upgrade: bigger savings and a bigger comfort jump. Our calculator has a Red Deer setting for exactly this reason.
Two kinds of customers, one truck
In-town homes
Red Deer's older neighbourhoods — Waskasoo, Parkvale, Eastview, Mountview — carry the same thin-attic story as Calgary's bungalow belt. Top-up to R-50 from $1.65/ft², and Red Deer participates in CEIP, so $0-down property-tax financing applies here too.
Farms & barns
Central Alberta is the heart of the province's poultry and mixed-farming country. Propane-heated barns with R-10–R-15 ceilings are where insulation returns thousands a year — and where the On-Farm Efficiency Program will cost-share 50% when intake reopens (~Sept 2026). We quote now so you can apply on day one. The barn page has the numbers.
How scheduling works out here
- Weekly corridor runs — we batch Central Alberta jobs so you're never paying Calgary travel time.
- Farm scheduling around flock cycles, harvest, and weather. Empty barns preferred; biosecurity protocols always.
- Acreages welcome — shops and quonset mezzanines take blown-in well; we'll say so honestly when a building is better served by spray foam and point you to someone good.
Next corridor run has room for your place
House in Red Deer or barn outside Ponoka — free assessment, fixed quote, program paperwork included.
Get on the schedule