Field notes from our Springfield restoration technicians about water losses, smoke damage, mold, and dealing with adjusters.

Springfield's finished basements are both the most valuable and most flood-prone spaces in the borough's mid-century housing stock. Here is what to do in the first hour — and what not to do.
Read more →A pipe burst in January at a Springfield home is harder to dry than the same loss in July. The physics of drying change at low temperatures, and the approach has to change with them.
Read more →When a Union County storm sends water into your Springfield home, whether your claim pays depends on how and where that water entered — and on the documentation your restoration crew creates before cleanup begins.
Read more →Mold in a Springfield home after a water loss is not inevitable — but the biology is predictable, the timeline is short, and the cost of prevention is a fraction of the cost of remediation.
Read more →A sewage backup in a Union County home is a biohazard event, not a water cleanup. The materials, protocol, and insurance path are different — and getting them wrong creates health risk and claim problems.
Read more →When the dehumidifiers come out of a Springfield home after a water loss, the real work of restoring the property is just starting. Here is what the rebuild involves, how insurance scopes get calculated, and what Union County homeowners should expect.
Read more →Any property loss, any hour — a Springfield crew is on the way. The same crew dries it, documents it, and puts it back together.