SERVPRO of Spring Valley/Jamul is Here to Save the Day!
If water damage is raining on your parade, SERVPRO® of Spring Valley/Jamul can help remediate it. Fixing problems at work can be frustrating. When it comes to fixing water damage, we are Here to Help.
SERVPRO of Spring Valley/Jamul
When water damage hits, or rather sloshes your business, call the professionals: SERVPRO of Spring Valley/Jamul at 619-600-5305.
Water damage is not one of those few but magical things that goes away if you ignore it (Where can we find those problems? Do they exist?)
As soon as you’re aware of water damage, call for help. Our emergency services are always available, and water damage is clearly an emergency.
Water Damage
Regardless of whether we need to remove standing water, we’ll have to dry the building itself and remove water from the equipment, furniture, and other belongings before we repair the damage, partially because the water will prevent us from doing the necessary work, but also because it will continue to damage the materials.
Water is necessary, but also destructive. In a flood or other water disaster, water will (or may do) the following:
- Separate the layers of laminated flooring
- Leach dyes from carpet, upholstery, other materials
- Fuse documents and other materials together
- Short-circuit electronics
- Corrode wiring, batteries, delicate metals, and electronics
- Shred insulation, wallpaper, and drywall
- Swell wood, opens fissures in grout, concrete, roof shingles
- Provide a hospitable environment for microbial growth, including mold
- Weaken textiles
- Rot natural fabrics and wood
- Spread through air ducts, HVAC, and through porous materials
We could go on, but you can binge on horror movies on the weekend.
SERVPRO of Spring Valley/Jamul to the Rescue!
We have the equipment, the experience, and the ability to remediate the water damage. We work to get Faster to any size disaster so you can recover faster from any size disaster.
We also have a range of restoration services to help get your business back to its preloss condition, “Like it never even happened.”
Trivia Time!
…and now for something completely different.
We used to urge the members of the Committee for Semi-useful Information to come up with information that was (a) at least semi-useful, and (b) perhaps tangentially related to the topic of the week, but as they realized that the better they did, the less likely they would be moved from the assignment, the more often they strayed from utility and relevance.
This week:
As far as anyone knows, the first actor was Thespis of Icaria (hence, “thespian”), or maybe he was the first actor who had an agent. He worked in the 6th century B.C.E. He must have had had co-stars, right? The article that mentioned him said he played “a character in a tragedy”: a character – as in, there were others.
SERVPRO of Spring Valley/Jamul
We’ll clean and disinfect your stage so you can act upon it.