Louisiana camps take more punishment than just about any structure out there — heat, humidity, salt air, flooding, bugs, and years of neglect when hunting season's not in. Spray foam is the only insulation that holds up to all of it.
Elevated camps sit right in the middle of Louisiana's harshest environment. The underside of the floor is exposed to bayou humidity, flooding, insects, and whatever the weather throws at it. The walls and roof deal with intense solar heat, salt air near the coast, and years of abuse.
When these structures are insulated poorly — or not at all — they're a sauna in summer and a money pit year-round. The AC runs non-stop, moisture gets into the walls, and the whole thing starts deteriorating from the inside.
Spray foam changes all of that. We've insulated dozens of Louisiana camps, and the difference is night and day. People come back in summer to a camp they can actually be comfortable in.
Built over or near water, these camps are surrounded by moisture 365 days a year. Spray foam is the right answer for the environment they're in.
If you're spending cold mornings in a deer stand, you want to come back to a warm, comfortable camp — not one where the heat pump runs all night trying to catch up.
Coastal fishing camps deal with salt air and tidal flooding. Closed cell foam protects the structure and keeps interior conditions manageable.
When you drive out on a Friday, you want to walk into a camp that's already cool — not wait 3 hours for it to come down from 95°F.
We get out to camp locations all over South Louisiana. Give us a call and we'll figure out what your camp needs and what it'll cost. No fluff, straight answer.