Call for help with offices, retail spaces, apartments, medical suites, warehouses, churches, schools, and property manager water damage calls.
What to do right now
- Identify the source and whether building maintenance, plumber, roofer, or fire sprinkler contractor is needed.
- Protect people from slip hazards, electrical risks, and contaminated water.
- Take pictures of affected business areas, equipment, inventory, ceilings, and flooring.
- Share building instructions, parking, elevator rules, security, and preferred work windows.
How cleanup is usually handled
- Moisture mapping separates affected areas from spaces that can keep operating.
- Drying equipment placement should consider business hours, noise, customer safety, and safety.
- Documentation packages help owners, managers, and adjusters understand the mitigation plan.
What affects cost and insurance
Cost depends on square footage, source category, business interruption concerns, equipment needs, after-hours work, demolition, and rebuild estimate.
Commercial losses may involve property, tenant, business interruption, and liability questions. Clear pictures, logs, and job notes matter.
What helps us understand the job
Share the address area, source of water if known, when it started, whether water is still active, what rooms are affected, whether any occupants have health concerns, and whether insurance or a property manager is involved.
Related services
For broader cleanup, see water damage restoration in Los Angeles. If odor or visible growth appears after a leak, review mold after water leak cleanup or mold remediation.
