Baltimore has one of the oldest housing stocks on the East Coast. Neighborhoods like Mount Vernon, Bolton Hill, and Charles Village are filled with rowhomes built between 1870 and 1920. These homes were designed for coal furnaces and gravity-fed plumbing. When you retrofit a tankless water heater into a system with 60 feet of half-inch galvanized pipe, the cold water sandwich becomes worse. The longer the pipe run, the more cold water sits between the heater and your fixture. In winter, uninsulated pipes in unheated basements drop that standing water temperature into the 40s. The cold water slug you feel mid-shower is amplified by your home's age and layout.
We work in these homes every day. We know where the compromises are and what fixes actually work in tight spaces with limited venting options. Baltimore City inspectors also know us. We pull permits correctly, schedule inspections on time, and pass on the first attempt. That matters when you need gas line modifications or recirculation loop installations that touch multiple floors. Choosing a local plumber who understands both your home's construction and the city's permitting process saves you time and prevents costly rework.