ACA Restoration Aberdeen Township
📞 848-337-3661
Design-led, locally built

Fire Damage Restoration in Aberdeen Township.

Soot removal, smoke odor mitigation, structural cleaning, and full reconstruction after fire events.

Local team in Aberdeen Township Honest, transparent pricing 24/7 emergency line
Coverage Aberdeen Township + Matawan + Keyport
Speed Sub-hour active-loss response
Experience Working Monmouth County restoration
Service Overview

How We Approach It

After the fire department leaves, the real work starts. Soot is acidic — it etches into surfaces it sits on. Hours matter. Our {{city}} crew dispatches with HEPA equipment and content-cleaning capacity within the same hour as the call.

What's Included

  • Soot + smoke odor removal
  • HVAC decontamination
  • Pack-out + content cleaning
  • Hydroxyl odor treatment
  • Structural rebuild
  • Insurance-scope documentation

How Fire + Smoke Damage Actually Spreads Through a Property

The fire department's job is to put the fire out. They do it well. What they leave behind is the start of the restoration job — and the damage that determines the eventual claim size has very little to do with the visible burn area.

Soot is acidic and moves on air currents. While the fire was burning, the HVAC system likely circulated soot-laden air through every room of the structure. Soot settled on horizontal surfaces, infiltrated upholstery and carpet fibers, and coated the inside of ductwork. Heat caused volatile organic compounds in plastics, fabrics, and finishes to off-gas, and those compounds redeposited on cooler surfaces as a sticky odor-bearing residue that does not wash off.

Our scope addresses each: HEPA vacuuming of horizontal surfaces, dry-chem sponge cleaning of walls and ceilings, HVAC duct cleaning per NADCA standards, content pack-out for items that need shop-cleaning, and hydroxyl or ozone treatment for porous materials in the affected envelope. None of this is optional — skipping any phase leaves residual odor that returns within weeks.

Hvac Decontamination — the Step Most Restorers Skip

If smoke entered the HVAC system, the system needs to be cleaned per NADCA (National Air Duct Cleaners Association) standards before re-occupancy. Soot inside ductwork acts as an odor reservoir — every time the HVAC runs, it pushes that residue back into the living space. Owners report "the smoke smell came back" weeks after restoration. The reason is almost always that the ducts were not properly cleaned.

Our HVAC scope: source removal (HEPA vacuuming of supply + return ducts), antimicrobial treatment, replacement of any porous duct insulation that was contaminated, and replacement of the air handler filter + any disposable components. We document with before/after photos at multiple inspection points so the carrier sees the work was actually completed and not just billed.

For homes with old ductwork that was already in marginal condition before the fire, we will tell you honestly when replacement makes more sense than cleaning. The decision drives a different scope, different timeline, different insurance discussion — better to know on day one than discover after a partial cleaning that the system needs replacement anyway.

Process

Our Process

  1. 01

    You Call

    A real person answers 24/7. We get the address, the situation, what equipment to load. Two minutes max on the call.

  2. 02

    We Roll

    Truck heads out within minutes for active losses. Standard target is on-site within 60 minutes anywhere in our Aberdeen Township footprint.

  3. 03

    Stop the Damage

    Water out, contaminated material removed, drying gear deployed, affected areas sealed off. The first 24 hours decide whether the loss stays small.

  4. 04

    Dry It Right

    Air movers + dehumidifiers run for 3-5 days. We log moisture readings daily, reposition equipment until every wet substrate hits the dry standard.

  5. 05

    Put It Back

    Same crew that pulled out the wet drywall puts the new drywall back. One contract from first call to final walk-through.

The difference

Why Customers Choose Us

Real reasons. No invented stats, no manufactured awards.

  • 01

    Honest Timelines

    Standard residential drying: 3-5 days. Hardwood-heavy losses: 7-10 days. Reconstruction: 2-12 weeks depending on scope and material lead times. We give realistic schedules at the start, not optimistic guesses that slip.

  • 02

    No Hidden Scope

    Xactimate scope, line-item pricing, supplements documented and approved before work proceeds. The price you see at scoping is the price you pay — barring discovered conditions that get added as transparent supplements with carrier approval.

  • 03

    Trade Coordination Handled For You

    Specialty work — plumbing, electrical, HVAC, structural — coordinated through us. We bring qualified trades into the scope rather than handing the homeowner a list of phone numbers.

Service Area

Serving Monmouth County

Our Aberdeen Township dispatch covers a tight radius across Monmouth County. The compact service area is intentional — restoration work scales with response time, and minutes save material. Matawan, Keyport, and Hazlet all reach inside 30 minutes during normal traffic.

Counties Covered

  • Monmouth County, NJ

Cities We Service

Each Monmouth city below opens a local page with arrival times from our Aberdeen Township base and the loss patterns we handle most often in that municipality.

Not sure if you're in our area? Call 848-337-3661 and we'll tell you in 30 seconds.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

If you don't see your question, just call or message us.

How long does a fire restoration job typically take? +

A small contained fire with smoke damage but no structural rebuild: 2-4 weeks. A significant fire requiring partial structural reconstruction: 6-12 weeks. A total loss requiring full rebuild: 4-9 months. The timeline depends on scope, material lead times, and insurance approval cycle. We give a realistic week-by-week schedule at the start.

Can I clean up the water myself before you arrive? +

You can extract surface water with a wet/dry vacuum and start moving content away from the cascade path — those help. Do not lift wet drywall (it crumbles and makes cleanup harder), do not run heaters trying to dry it yourself (you drive moisture deeper into materials), and do not throw damaged contents away before we document for insurance. The 30-60 minutes between your call and our arrival are worth using for documentation, not partial demo.

What is the difference between mitigation and reconstruction? +

Mitigation is the emergency phase — stopping the loss, extracting water, drying the structure, removing damaged material. Reconstruction is the rebuild — replacing drywall, installing flooring, painting, finishing. Many restorers only do mitigation and hand the rebuild to a separate general contractor, which often creates scope-coordination problems. We do both as one contract so the rebuild matches what was scoped during mitigation.

Do you handle storm damage to roofs? +

Emergency tarping yes — we secure compromised roof openings to prevent further weather intrusion. Permanent roof replacement we coordinate with a licensed roofing contractor in our network rather than doing in-house. The water damage that follows roof intrusion is our scope; the structural roof itself is a roofer's scope. We handle the coordination so you have one project manager not two.

How do you document moisture readings for insurance? +

We map every wet substrate on a building diagram, take initial moisture readings with calibrated meters, log readings at every daily monitoring visit, and compare against the manufacturer's dry-standard for that material. Final clearance readings show every wet substrate returned to baseline. Adjusters get the full record — building diagram, meter readings by date, equipment run logs. This is what gets the claim approved without back-and-forth.

What happens if mold is found during the dry-out? +

If we discover existing mold growth during a water restoration job — which happens when a slow leak was already growing mold before the recent loss — we contain that area immediately and remediate per IICRC S520 before reconstruction starts. The discovery becomes a supplemental scope item for the carrier. Done correctly, both the water loss and the pre-existing mold get resolved as one coordinated project.

Do you offer free estimates? +

For property losses (water, fire, storm, sewage), we provide a no-cost on-site assessment and an Xactimate scope of work. For non-emergency reconstruction or mold remediation we provide a written estimate after on-site evaluation. We do not give phone-quote prices for restoration work — accurate scoping requires seeing the loss in person.

Free Phone Consultation

Ready to Plan Your Project? Pick Up the Phone.

One conversation, no pressure. We'll listen, ask the right questions, and tell you what your project actually involves. Calls go to a real person, not a call center.

📞 Tap To Call 848-337-3661

24/7 Emergency Dispatch

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