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Water Damage leaves many seen and unseen damages in a
building and often is the most destructive damage of any disaster.
Visible damage can include wet carpet or floors, stained walls,
ceilings and furnishings as well obvious structural damage. Often
it is the unseen destruction that can cause the most devastating
damage. Walls will absorb moisture, which in turn will allow mold
and fungi to run rampant.
Immediate response is critical when dealing with a home or
business that has suffered a sudden or accidental flood. If the
humidity in the building is not brought under control in short
order, significant secondary damages will result. Beyond ruining
the flooring, furnishings and walls it causes mold and fungi to
grow anywhere moisture is trapped, in turn leaving a significant
health risk to you, your family or business. Hazardous
contamination, structural decay and dry rot and severe health
problems are often related to a mishandled water damage
restoration. Special Forces will properly extract the water, dry,
dehumidify and stabilize the building in order to avoid further
losses. Once the humidity is reduced to a level that will not
cause further damage or support microbial growth, we will fully
restore your home or business.
Water damage usually occurs in the following five stages:
Stage 1:
The free-flow of water by gravity. Gravity will level out the
available water and cause it to find cracks in the floor, plumbing
penetrations and many other openings. This affects the floors
below as well as other adjacent spaces. Quick action at earlier
stages of water damage will reduce the costs and resulting
cleanup. On the other hand, delaying action increases both
exponentially.
Stage 2:
The wicking of moisture into material that comes in direct
contact with water. Damage continues to increase as long as
free-water touches gypsum board, wood floors, furniture and
documents due to the tendency of materials to draw in moisture
through capillary action. This damage is mitigated by quick and
thorough water-extraction, as it will remove the free-water and
stop the wicking. Effective action at this stage will drastically
reduce the time and effort to dry out the wet building materials.
Stage 3:
High humidity damage. This occurs when the moisture on and in
the wet materials begins to evaporate, saturating the surrounding
air. Previously unaffected materials now take on moisture. Early
signs of high humidity damage include condensation forming on
walls, ceiling tiles sagging from high moisture content and paper
stock taking on moisture to the point it cannot be used for
copying. This damage is mitigated by controlling the relative
humidity inside the building through the use of high-capacity
dehumidifiers. Quick action at this stage will keep the moisture
content of the building material and contents below the threshold
at which they will support microbial growth.
Stage 4:
Active microbial growth. This begins when materials have
taken on sufficient moisture to be able to support mold and
mildew. The threshold for most cellulose-based material (i.e.,
wood, documents and the paper covering on gypsum board) is when
their moisture content exceeds 20 to 25 percent of their weight.
Reducing this damage is accomplished by controlling three key
conditions of the building's air: relative humidity, temperature
and air circulation. Controlling these will create an environment
that will rapidly dry the materials back to their pre-loss
moisture content. Effective action at this point will generally
confine the damage to the area that was directly affected by the
water damage event.
Stage 5:
The spread of microbials to other areas, originally
unaffected areas of the building. The spread of microbials (i.e.,
mold, mildew, odors and other pathogens) may eventually occur due
to unchecked microbial growth in the affected area, the movement
of people throughout the building, air circulation systems and/or
elevator movement from floor-to-floor. If this stage of water
damage occurs, a comprehensive plan must be put together involving
various indoor air quality professionals and contractors. Quick
and effective action at the earliest possible stage will reduce
interruption to the business, reduce overall restoration costs and
increase the likelihood that irreplaceable items will still be
usable. This type of needed action can be facilitated by:
- Qualifying a drying contractor prior to
any loss.
- Communicating your agendas and plans with
the contractor.
- Placing them into a written disaster
recovery plan (DRP).
Water Damage Emergency Tips -
Click Here
Check here are some helpful severe weather
websites
The
Weather Channel
Moreweather.com
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