Mold in a Jersey City building is almost always the aftermath of a water event that was not fully dried ืโฌโ a slow supply-line weep behind a vanity, a window leak that wet the rough sill season after season, or a unit-above overflow that saturated a ceiling and was only surface-dried. Jersey City Flood Clean Up treats mold by attacking the moisture source before a single piece of drywall comes out. We build containment, run negative-air filtration, remove affected materials under cover, and verify the cavity is dry with meters before anything closes back up. In Hudson County's humid summers, that source-first discipline is what keeps the colony from returning.
- IICRC S520 protocol
- Negative-air containment
- HEPA filtration
- Source removal to documented line
- Antimicrobial application
- Optional 3rd-party clearance testing
Containment + HEPA Filtration โ Why The Plastic Sheeting Matters
If you walk into a mold remediation job and the contractor is not running HEPA-filtered negative-air containment, walk back out and call someone else. Disturbing mold growth releases millions of spores into the air. Without containment, those spores spread throughout the rest of the property โ turning a contained 200 sqft mold problem into a whole-house contamination event.
Proper containment: 6-mil plastic sheeting + zip-wall framing creates a sealed barrier between the affected area and the rest of the structure. HEPA-filtered air scrubbers run inside the containment to capture airborne spores during the work. Negative-air pressure differential (containment is at lower pressure than the rest of the structure) means any air leakage flows INTO the containment rather than out. PPE for the techs: Tyvek suits, respirators with P100 cartridges, gloves, foot covers.
This setup adds equipment cost and labor time to a remediation job, which is why fly-by-night operators skip it. The cost difference shows up later โ when the contamination has spread to areas it was not in before, and the second remediation is 3-5x the first.
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 โ applied AFTER source removal, on remaining hard surfaces, as a final step before reconstruction. They do not substitute for source removal. A Jersey City restorer who promises to "spray and seal" without removing contaminated substrate is selling a treatment that fails predictably.
Mold Remediation and the rest of your recovery
A property loss in Jersey City rarely stays in one lane โ mold remediation often overlaps with structural drying, smoke odor removal, storm damage restoration, sewage cleanup, reconstruction, and our crew handles all of it under one contract. We dispatch the same standard to Mold Remediation in Hoboken, Mold Remediation in Bayonne, Union City mold remediation, North Bergen mold remediation and everywhere else across Hudson County.
If you searched for water damage restoration near me, you have reached a local team โ call 551-351-9724 any hour. For background, read Water Damage in a Jersey City Multifamily Building: What Landlords and Property Managers Need to Know on our blog, or head back to our Jersey City home page to see everything we do.