AB Restoration Paterson
📞 862-421-8938
Paterson • NJ

Mold Remediation in Paterson.

Containment, removal, and prevention of mold growth after water events or chronic moisture problems.

Local team in Paterson Honest, transparent pricing 24/7 emergency line
Trained IICRC-certified technicians
Equipped Industrial-grade drying + extraction
Coordinated Trade sub-coordination handled in-house
Service Overview

How We Approach It

Visible mold growth on a wall or ceiling is rarely the whole problem — fungal growth typically extends into wall cavities, behind baseboards, and inside HVAC ducts that were exposed to the same moisture. Our scope covers what is visible PLUS what is hidden.

What's Included

  • IICRC S520 protocol
  • Negative-air containment
  • HEPA filtration
  • Source removal to documented line
  • Antimicrobial application
  • Optional 3rd-party clearance testing

Why Bleach Does Not Kill Mold (And What Actually Does)

The single most common mold-remediation myth: bleach kills mold. It does not. Bleach is mostly water plus sodium hypochlorite. It can lighten surface staining (which is why people think it worked) but the chlorine evaporates while the water soaks into porous material, feeding the fungal growth underneath. Within weeks the visible mold returns.

What actually works: physical removal of the contaminated substrate. If mold is on porous material (drywall, insulation, untreated wood, carpet pad), remove the material. If mold is on hard non-porous surfaces (sealed concrete, finished wood, ceramic tile), HEPA vacuum + wipe with EPA-registered antimicrobial. Either way, the source moisture has to be eliminated first or the mold returns regardless of what cleaning was done.

Antimicrobial chemicals have a place in our protocol — applied AFTER source removal, on remaining hard surfaces, as a final step before reconstruction. They do not substitute for source removal. A {{city}} restorer who promises to "spray and seal" without removing contaminated substrate is selling a treatment that fails predictably.

Iicrc S520 Protocol — What Proper Mold Remediation Looks Like

The IICRC S520 standard defines the protocol for safe, effective mold remediation. It is not legally required in {{state}} but it is what good restorers follow because it is the only approach that actually works long-term. The shortcut versions (spray bleach on it, paint over it, fog with antimicrobial, leave the source moisture in place) all fail within months.

The protocol has five phases: assessment (where is the mold, how extensive, what species, source moisture identified and stopped), containment (negative-air pressure differential between affected and unaffected spaces, plastic sheeting, HEPA-filtered air scrubbers running continuously), source removal (porous materials with growth get removed and bagged for disposal — drywall to documented flood line, insulation, untreated wood), HEPA cleaning (all hard surfaces in the containment), and verification (visual inspection + optional third-party air sampling to confirm the contamination has been removed).

Reconstruction only starts AFTER verification clears. New material does not go up against contaminated substrate. Skipping verification is how you end up with mold returning behind a freshly-painted wall.

Process

Our Process

  1. 01

    A Real Person Answers

    No automated phone tree. No call-center. You get a live dispatcher who listens, asks the right questions, and tells you what we are sending.

  2. 02

    Same-hour Response

    Truck rolls out of Paterson dispatch with the right equipment for what you described. Average on-site time under an hour anywhere in Passaic County.

  3. 03

    Honest Assessment

    We tell you what we see in plain language. What needs to come out, what can be saved, what the insurance discussion looks like, what the realistic timeline is.

  4. 04

    Document for Insurance

    Photos, moisture readings, written cause-of-loss narrative — all in the format your adjuster expects. We handle the documentation so you do not have to.

  5. 05

    Finish the Job

    Mitigation flows directly into reconstruction. Same crew, same project manager, same accountability. We do not hand off mid-project.

The difference

Why Customers Choose Us

Real reasons. No invented stats, no manufactured awards.

  • 01

    Carrier-Recognized Scopes

    NJM, Travelers, State Farm, Allstate, Liberty Mutual, Chubb — our scope formats match what their adjusters expect. Faster claim cycles, fewer callbacks, less friction between us and the adjuster paying for the work.

  • 02

    No Storm-Chase Tactics

    No unsolicited door-knocking after weather events. No Assignment of Benefits paperwork. No predatory "insurance pays — no cost to you" pitches. The work speaks for itself.

  • 03

    Reconstruction Done Right

    Drywall, flooring, paint, cabinetry, trim — handled by the same crew that did the dry-out. Specialty trades (plaster, hardwood, custom millwork) coordinated by us. You do not manage five sub-contractors.

Service Area

Serving Passaic County

Restoration coverage from Paterson, NJ across the full Passaic County footprint. Active emergencies dispatch within the hour. Non-emergency consultations and reconstruction work scheduled at the property owner's convenience. We work both single-family residential and small commercial in the corridor.

Counties Covered

  • Passaic County, NJ

Cities We Service

Each Passaic city below opens a local page with arrival times from our Paterson base and the loss patterns we handle most often in that municipality.

Not sure if you're in our area? Call 862-421-8938 and we'll tell you in 30 seconds.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

If you don't see your question, just call or message us.

Do you offer free estimates? +

For property losses (water, fire, storm, sewage), we provide a no-cost on-site assessment and an Xactimate scope of work. For non-emergency reconstruction or mold remediation we provide a written estimate after on-site evaluation. We do not give phone-quote prices for restoration work — accurate scoping requires seeing the loss in person.

What happens if mold is found during the dry-out? +

If we discover existing mold growth during a water restoration job — which happens when a slow leak was already growing mold before the recent loss — we contain that area immediately and remediate per IICRC S520 before reconstruction starts. The discovery becomes a supplemental scope item for the carrier. Done correctly, both the water loss and the pre-existing mold get resolved as one coordinated project.

How do you document moisture readings for insurance? +

We map every wet substrate on a building diagram, take initial moisture readings with calibrated meters, log readings at every daily monitoring visit, and compare against the manufacturer's dry-standard for that material. Final clearance readings show every wet substrate returned to baseline. Adjusters get the full record — building diagram, meter readings by date, equipment run logs. This is what gets the claim approved without back-and-forth.

Do you handle storm damage to roofs? +

Emergency tarping yes — we secure compromised roof openings to prevent further weather intrusion. Permanent roof replacement we coordinate with a licensed roofing contractor in our network rather than doing in-house. The water damage that follows roof intrusion is our scope; the structural roof itself is a roofer's scope. We handle the coordination so you have one project manager not two.

What is the difference between mitigation and reconstruction? +

Mitigation is the emergency phase — stopping the loss, extracting water, drying the structure, removing damaged material. Reconstruction is the rebuild — replacing drywall, installing flooring, painting, finishing. Many restorers only do mitigation and hand the rebuild to a separate general contractor, which often creates scope-coordination problems. We do both as one contract so the rebuild matches what was scoped during mitigation.

Can I clean up the water myself before you arrive? +

You can extract surface water with a wet/dry vacuum and start moving content away from the cascade path — those help. Do not lift wet drywall (it crumbles and makes cleanup harder), do not run heaters trying to dry it yourself (you drive moisture deeper into materials), and do not throw damaged contents away before we document for insurance. The 30-60 minutes between your call and our arrival are worth using for documentation, not partial demo.

How long does a fire restoration job typically take? +

A small contained fire with smoke damage but no structural rebuild: 2-4 weeks. A significant fire requiring partial structural reconstruction: 6-12 weeks. A total loss requiring full rebuild: 4-9 months. The timeline depends on scope, material lead times, and insurance approval cycle. We give a realistic week-by-week schedule at the start.

Call Now • Paterson

Property Damage in Paterson? We Are on Site Inside the Hour.

One phone call gets a truck rolling. Real Paterson team, real local response time, no automated phone tree. We'll be on site fast.

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24/7 Emergency Dispatch

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