Buffalo Rewire · Neighborhood service
West Seneca's oldest houses hide inside newer neighborhoods, and the inspection report is usually how owners find out.
“Knob and tube wiring observed in basement. Unable to determine full extent. Recommend evaluation by a licensed electrician.” That sentence, or one close to it, is how most of our West Seneca work starts. A home inspector writes it, a buyer’s agent forwards it, and a sale that was moving suddenly is not. If that is where you are standing right now, mid-transaction with a flagged report, this page is for you.
West Seneca reads postwar from the road, and most of it is. But the town is older than its subdivisions. There are farmhouse-era homes scattered through it that predate the streets around them, and older stock strung along Buffalo Creek and Cazenovia Creek, where the town’s first houses went in. The subdivisions grew up around these houses, and a lot of them were updated cosmetically over the years until they blend right in.
The tell is in the basement. We walk into a house that looks 1955 from the curb and find half the foundation is stone and half is block. The stone half is the original house. That is where the knob and tube lives, and it is usually still feeding the ceiling boxes above it. These layered houses are the signature West Seneca job: an 1890s or 1920s core, a 1950s addition wired with cable, a 1980s family room off the back, three eras of wiring tied together in a basement junction box.
Layered houses are actually good news for cost. We are not rewiring the whole footprint, only the original core where the knob and tube survives. We map it circuit by circuit, replace the live original runs, leave the sound later wiring alone, and tie everything into one properly sized panel. The plaster in the old core stays on the walls. We fish from the basement and the attic, the same way we do in the city. Why the old wiring has to go is covered in our knob and tube guide, and what carriers require is covered in our insurance guide.
Half our West Seneca calls have a transaction attached, and the clock changes everything. A flagged report does not have to kill a deal. What kills deals is vagueness, nobody knowing whether the fix is four thousand dollars or twenty-four thousand. A written assessment with a firm number gives the buyer, the seller, and both agents something concrete to negotiate with. We have watched that one document turn a stalled closing back into a scheduled one. We move fast in these situations because we know what is riding on it.
Send us the inspection report or insurance letter. We will decode it for free and tell you what the flag actually means for your deal.
Request a written assessment. We respond within one business day. If you have a closing date, put it in the form.