Trash chute pressure washing takes special procedures and equipment.

 

Trash Chute Before Pressure Washing

Trash Chute Before Pressure Washing

After a few years of dropping bags of food, kitty litter, diapers and whatever down the trash chute, they can get pretty smelly. No matter how they’re designed, some of the sticky trash residue adheres to the inside surface.

Trash Chute After Pressure Washing

Trash Chute After Pressure Washing

You can’t get inside and do the washing since they’re too small for a person to do any pressure washing – if you can get in at all. Even if they’re big enough for a person, the access isn’t designed to allow anyone to get in easily.

Trash Chute Access Door

Trash Chute Access Door

And you can’t get too carried away with the pressure and water you use. There are access doors on every floor and they aren’t designed to hold high pressure water in.

Trash Chute Empties Into The Trash Room

Trash Chute Empties Into The Trash Room

And you have to make sure the room at the bottom of the trash chute has a way to control the water flow. There will be a few hundred gallons of hot soapy water coming down and you don’t want it to get outside the trash room.

Trash Chute Top Cover

Trash Chute Top Cover

This is strictly a job for a professional pressure washing company. Trying to save a few bucks by hiring someone who isn’t experienced enough to guarantee their work – and have full commercial insurance coverage – can end up being a huge mistake.

We’ve cleaned many trash chutes in buildings up to 32 stories tall,  so we know what we’re doing. So when your tenants start complaining of the odors of too many smelly trash bags, give us a call.

 

We’ll take care of your trash chute pressure washing and have your building smelling fresh in just a few hours.

 

 

 

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