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All About Damage Contractors

How much could there be to know about damage contractors and their work? Well, allow us to give you a hint: a lot more than you probably realize. We can describe what these contractors do in about one sentence. They repair items and home materials that have been damaged, often by things like fires and floods. This sentence tells you a lot, but it does not tell you everything. That's why we really recommend reading this blog. There's so much more to know about damage contractors, and the articles here will open up your world in that regard. Learn about their work, their challenges, and the way the industry works, in general.

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All About Damage Contractors

Storm Damage Restoration: How Do You Protect Your Home?

by Charlotte Ramos

If severe weather conditions recently flooded or saturated a large area of your house, you want to assess and restore your house back to normal as soon as possible. If you reach out to a damage contractor, you can keep the water in your home from completely destroying it. Learn how you can protect your damaged home below.

Assess Your House

The most important thing you can do at this moment is to assess the internal conditions of your home. Even if you plan to restore your home within a few days, you want to ensure it doesn't have anything in it that can interfere with the restoration later, including mold. Mold can slow down, or even stop, the restoration of your home.    

Large patches, or colonies, of mold can grow on the damp surfaces of your home within 24 to 48 hours after it becomes damaged or flooded with water. Mold doesn't just grow on damp or saturated wood, the fungus can also grow on organic materials, such as textiles, floor tiles, and carpets. If you dry the items out in your home before mold infects them, you can restore them back to normal later.

In addition to mold, the fungus wet rot can also take hold of your damaged home. Wet rot develops specifically on wood, including wooden attic trusses and beams. If you find white or brown fuzzy patches of fungus growing on your walls and other wooden structures, stop and call a damage contractor immediately. Along with mold, you may not have long before wet rot destroys the remainder of your home.

Dry Out and Cover Your House

A damage contractor will dry out your entire house as quickly as possible. You want to keep the mold and wet rot in your home from branching out to other places in the house. A contractor will most likely set large circulating fans throughout your home. If it becomes necessary to do so, a contractor will also use an extraction machine to suck up the rest of the water in your house.

After a restoration contractor removes all traces of moisture from your home, they'll cover the damaged parts of the house with a shrink wrap. A shrink wrap looks similar to a large tarp. The wrap creates a seal-tight membrane over the home's damaged frame. The wrap prevents humid air, pests, and even fungi from entering the home until they restore it for you.   

If you need immediate services to keep your home safe from fungi and outside contaminants after a storm, contact a storm damage contractor near you.   

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