I was contacted by a property manager whom I have known for 5 years. She was the property manager who recruited me to join BOMA in Baltimore. Upon surveying their reflective flat roof in Perryville, MD, we found their roof had mold and more growing on it. It was also substantially darkened by both the organic growth and general filth. The tenant provides acute medical care on-site, so indoor air quality and sanitation are of paramount importance. Their engineer was so impressed by both our thorough process and results, he was texting photos of us working and the results to his management team.
Nice job, Jeff! Great results make for great photos. More importantly, what a great service you provided to the patients being treated in that facility.
Looks great Jeff. I'm curious too on the mix you used, how much hand scrubbing was involved and how did you handle the odor/fumes during the cleaning process (getting inside)?
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Steve Mazzuca President/CEO
2625 Townsgate Rd. Suite 330 Westlake Village CA 91361
433 N. Camden Dr. Suite 400 Beverly Hills, CA 90210
You can get inexpensive non-contact infrared thermometers on Amazon for <$15. The trick (or challenge) to being accurate would be to have the sun in about the same position overhead and the day be pretty much the same temperature and cloud cover to get the most accurate comparable measurements. Not to bicker, but I'd not be surprised if that roof was 30+ degrees cooler now. One reason I say this is if you look at the shadow under the pipe in the original photo and look at the shadow in the bright white photo, the shadow is barely visible in the clean photo which suggests the clean photo was taken late in the day or under a lot of cloud cover. My eyes hurt just thinking how bright that roof would be under full sunlight. :0)