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Construction Site Cleaning: Keeping Your Project Safe and Organized
Your commercial construction project is progressing on schedule. Framing is complete, electrical rough-in is done, and HVAC installation starts next week. But when you walk the site, you see piles of scrap lumber blocking walkways, drywall dust covering every surface, empty material packaging scattered across the floor, and discarded fasteners creating trip hazards everywhere. The subcontractors keep promising they'll clean up "at the end," but debris accumulates faster than
matthew4920
Mar 1618 min read


Multi-Phase Construction Cleanup: When to Schedule Each Cleaning Stage
Your commercial construction project superintendent just called three separate cleaning companies asking for quotes. One company quoted "final construction cleaning" at $8,000. Another quoted "post-construction cleaning" at $12,000. A third quoted "rough clean, final clean, and touch-up clean" totaling $18,000. You're confused. Aren't all these companies quoting the same service? Why do the prices vary so dramatically? Which cleaning stages does your project actually need, an
matthew4920
Mar 1617 min read


Post-Construction Dust: Why Professional Cleaning Is Essential
Your commercial construction project in New Jersey is complete. The contractors have left. The space looks finished. But run your hand along a baseboard, open a cabinet, or look closely at a window sill — and your hand comes up white with fine powder. That's post-construction dust. And it's everywhere. Inside every cabinet. Coating every surface. In HVAC ductwork. On light fixtures. Behind appliances. In electrical outlets. Under flooring edges. The fine talc-like powder that
matthew4920
Mar 313 min read


Construction Debris Removal: How Professional Cleaners Handle the Mess
Your commercial construction project in New Jersey is structurally complete. The framing is done, the drywall is up, the electrical and plumbing are in. But walk through the site and you're looking at: Thousands of pounds of construction debris. Wood scraps piled in corners. Drywall cutoffs stacked against walls. Metal ductwork pieces scattered across the floor. Cardboard boxes everywhere. Plastic sheeting taped to every surface. Paint cans, adhesive containers, and material
matthew4920
Feb 2814 min read
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