The MissionCraft 6-Pillar Home Health Framework
One assessment. Six pillars. One clearer picture of home risk.
Every MissionCraft evaluation is built around six core areas of residential safety—giving families a more complete view of how their home supports safety, health, readiness, and long-term living.
Home Safety Inspection
A safety-first evaluation of the home’s structure, systems, layout, and everyday conditions—focused on how safely the home functions for the people living in it.Air Quality, Mold & Radon
Assessment of ventilation, moisture patterns, mold risk, and radon concerns that may affect the health of the indoor environment.—critical in Wayne County’s high‑risk radon area—to protect the lungs living in your home.Water Quality
Evaluation of water-related concerns that may impact safe drinking, cooking, bathing, and everyday household use.Age in Place
A room-by-room look at how well the home supports independence, mobility, and safer daily living over time.Emergency Preparedness
Review of alarms, exits, household readiness, and practical emergency planning so families are better prepared before or if something goes wrong.Human BioMarkers
A developing bridge between what is happening in the home and what may be showing up in the body—helping families think more clearly about environmental health patterns and next steps.
Most services look at one issue at a time: a home inspection, a radon test, a mold concern, wondering what’s in the water? or a question about how long you can safely stay in your home. MissionCraft brings those concerns together into one structured assessment built around six pillars: Home Safety, Air Quality, Water Quality, Aging in Place, Emergency Preparedness, and Human BioMarkers.
These pillars give us a repeatable way to look at your house and the people living in it, so you’re not guessing where the real priorities are or what to do first.
This is what makes MissionCraft different: one structured framework, one independent guide, and one clearer path toward a safer, healthier home.
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This pillar looks at how safely your home is built and how it’s actually being used day to day. We review structure and systems, but also things like access paths, storage, sight lines, and the spots where small failures can turn into leaks, damage, or injuries if they’re ignored.
The goal isn’t to scare you—it’s to give you a practical picture of what’s fine, what needs watching, and what deserves attention sooner so you can plan and budget instead of being surprised.
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Air is something you can’t see, but you live in it 24/7. In this pillar, we look at ventilation, humidity, moisture patterns, and visible signs of mold risk, along with radon exposure, which is especially important in Wayne County’s high‑risk Zone 1 radon area.
You’ll learn where fresh air is moving well, where it’s trapped, and where moisture or radon may require follow‑up testing or mitigation. We keep the report plain‑language and action‑oriented so you can decide what level of testing or remediation makes sense for your household and budget.
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Here we focus on the water your household actually uses—at the kitchen sink, bathroom fixtures, and key taps. We look at simple indicators like taste, smell, staining, and fixture condition, and talk through when it might make sense to pursue lab testing or filtration.
This isn’t about selling you a specific filter system. It’s about helping you understand your risk profile, what’s likely fine, and where targeted changes (like point‑of‑use filters or maintenance) could improve safety and peace of mind.
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Homes aren’t static—people’s needs change. The Age in Place pillar looks at how well your home supports everyday movement now and how it might need to adapt over the next 5–10 years. We review entries and thresholds, stairs, bathrooms, bedrooms, routes to key areas, lighting, and alarms with an eye toward ease of use and recovery if something goes wrong.
You’ll get practical suggestions, from small adjustments to bigger ideas you can plan for over time, so your home can keep working for you instead of quietly working against you.
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This pillar brings emergency management into the home. We look at smoke and CO alarms, extinguishers, exits and escape paths, sump systems and backup power where relevant, and what would actually happen in a fire, power outage, or other disruption.
You’ll leave with a clearer sense of your current readiness, a short list of high‑value improvements, and a simple framework for talking through “what if” scenarios with your household without turning it into a worst‑case‑scenario exercise.
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The Human BioMarkers pillar is about connecting the dots between the home and the people in it. We note where home conditions—like moisture, air quality concerns, or other recurring issues—might be worth paying closer attention to over time, including through biomarker testing (such as labs that look at mold or environmental exposure patterns).
MissionCraft doesn’t diagnose or run medical testing, but this pillar helps you see where home and health might be related, so you’re not looking at symptoms and living conditions in separate silos.
One structured framework. One independent guide. One clearer view of home risk. Click below to learn more.