Wildlife in an attic soils insulation with droppings and urine, flattens its R-value, and leaves a contamination problem behind. We remove the ruined insulation, sanitize the space, and install fresh insulation so the attic is clean and efficient again.
Remediation follows removal. Once the animals are excluded, the attic itself has to be cleaned and restored.
Inspect the insulation for contamination, matting, and lost R-value, and confirm the wildlife entry is sealed so the work is not undone.
Remove soiled insulation and droppings, then sanitize the space to handle the contamination, not cover it.
Install new insulation to the right depth and R-value, restoring efficiency and a clean attic.
Contaminated insulation is both a health issue and an energy bill. Restoring it after a wildlife intrusion is the step that finishes the job, and it pairs with exclusion so the problem does not return.
Attic work usually follows wildlife removal and exclusion. Structural fixes run through home repair.
Attic remediation and installation across Northern Virginia. Pick your town for local detail.
Animals soil insulation with droppings and urine and flatten it underfoot, which destroys its R-value and leaves a contamination and odor problem. Removing and replacing it restores both the hygiene and the efficiency.
Yes. There is no point installing fresh insulation under an open roofline. We confirm the wildlife entry is excluded and sealed before the new insulation goes in.
It can be. Droppings can harbor pathogens and the material holds odor and allergens. Removal and sanitizing handle the contamination rather than trapping it in the attic.
Restoring proper depth and R-value brings the attic back to where it should be, which is where the heating and cooling savings come from.
One assessment scopes the contamination, the removal, and the fresh install.