Bridgehampton sits directly on the Atlantic with no barrier island between your property and open ocean. When a nor’easter rolls through or a tropical storm tracks up the Eastern Seaboard, the damage isn’t always obvious from the outside. Water finds its way into wall cavities, subfloors, and finished basements and in a home with custom millwork, a wine cellar, or a complex roofline, it can travel far before anyone notices. Getting the right team in early is the difference between a contained repair and a months-long restoration project.
A lot of Bridgehampton properties sit empty for weeks at a time during the off-season. If you’re managing your property remotely from the city and a storm moves through in November, you need someone who can respond without you being there assess the damage, document it properly, and start mitigation before hidden moisture becomes a mold problem. That’s exactly how we work.
The outcome you’re looking for isn’t just “dry and patched.” It’s your home back to the condition it was in before the storm, with a documented claim that reflects the full scope of what happened. That’s what a complete storm damage restoration actually looks like and that’s what we deliver.
We’ve been operating in Suffolk County for over 12 years, with more than 5,000 completed projects across Long Island. We didn’t appear after Sandy with a local phone number CEO Jessica Dussan and VP Leo Torres built this company from the ground up, and our names are on every job, not just the website.
We hold the Suffolk County General Contractor license, the NYS DOL Mold License, the NYS DOL Asbestos License, the USEPA Lead certification, and IICRC credentials that insurance adjusters specifically recognize. For Bridgehampton’s older housing stock pre-1978 homes near Mecox Bay, historic farmhouses along Montauk Highway, estate properties with complex building envelopes that licensing stack matters. A lot of contractors can extract water. Not many can legally handle what they find behind the walls.
We’re also NYS and NYC M/WBE certified a government-verified credential that requires documentation, review, and ongoing compliance. When you’re handing over keys to a multi-million-dollar property, that kind of verifiable accountability isn’t a small thing.
When you call, the first priority is stopping the damage from getting worse. That means emergency securing board-up, tarping, temporary weatherproofing so your property is protected while the full assessment happens. If you’re not on-site, we document everything with photos and written reports so you have a clear picture of what you’re dealing with before any decisions are made.
From there, water extraction and structural drying begin using commercial-grade equipment. Thermal imaging cameras identify hidden moisture in wall cavities and subfloors that look completely dry on the surface a critical step in Bridgehampton’s estate-style homes where water can migrate through complex building systems without any visible sign. Skipping this step is how mold ends up behind finished walls six weeks later.
Once the structure is dry and stabilized, the scope of repairs is documented and submitted to your insurance carrier. We work directly with adjusters, communicate on your behalf, and ensure the claim reflects the full scope of damage not just what was visible on day one. Structural repairs, drywall, flooring, painting, and finish work follow. The job isn’t done until the home is back to pre-storm condition. If the property involves pre-1978 materials that require asbestos or lead abatement, we handle that work in the same mobilization no need to coordinate a separate licensed contractor.
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Storm damage restoration in Bridgehampton isn’t a single service it’s a chain of needs that unfolds in sequence. We handle every link in that chain: emergency property securing, water extraction, structural drying, debris and tree removal, roof storm damage repair, mold remediation, asbestos and lead abatement, structural stabilization, and full cosmetic restoration. You don’t need to manage four different contractors during the most stressful week of the year.
For oceanfront and bay-adjacent properties along the Bridgehampton coast particularly those near Mecox Bay or the stretch between Flying Point and Townline Road storm damage restoration work can trigger permit requirements under multiple Southampton Town chapters simultaneously. That includes coastal erosion hazard area permits under Chapter 138, flood damage prevention compliance under Chapter 169, and wetlands review under Chapter 325, on top of standard building permits. Starting repair work without the right permits in place can mean doubled fees and code violations. We understand Southampton Town’s regulatory framework and handle permitting as part of the process, not as an afterthought.
Insurance claim assistance is built into every job not offered as an add-on. The documentation, adjuster communication, and direct billing we provide has been confirmed by actual customers in their own words. In a market where a single storm damage claim on a large estate can reach six figures, having a contractor who knows how to support a full and fair settlement isn’t a luxury. It’s the whole point.
The most important thing you can do in the first hour is call a licensed restoration contractor not your insurance company first, not a general handyman. A qualified team can begin emergency securing immediately, which stops additional water from entering the structure while the full damage assessment is being completed. This matters especially in Bridgehampton, where many properties sit unoccupied during the fall and winter storm seasons. If you’re managing your property remotely, a contractor who can respond without you being present and document everything thoroughly is essential.
Once the property is secured, a full moisture assessment including thermal imaging for hidden water in wall cavities and subfloors should happen before any drying or repair work begins. Skipping that step is how water damage turns into a mold remediation project weeks later. After documentation is complete, your contractor should be communicating directly with your insurance adjuster to ensure the claim reflects the full scope of damage, not just what’s visible on the surface.
In many cases, yes and the permit requirements in Bridgehampton are more layered than in most other Long Island communities. Because a significant portion of Bridgehampton sits within coastal erosion hazard areas, flood damage prevention zones, and wetlands jurisdictions, structural repair work following storm damage can trigger requirements under multiple Southampton Town chapters at the same time. A coastal erosion management permit alone carries a $1,500 application fee, and starting construction before filing a building permit results in doubled fees.
This is one of the most common and costly mistakes homeowners make after a storm hiring a contractor who skips the permitting process to move faster, only to face code violations and financial penalties on top of the original damage. Working with a licensed Suffolk County General Contractor who understands Southampton Town’s regulatory environment means permits are handled correctly from the start, and the restoration work is fully documented and code-compliant when it’s done.
Mold can begin establishing itself within 24 to 48 hours of water intrusion and in Bridgehampton’s coastal climate, where humidity levels are already elevated compared to inland Suffolk County, that timeline can be even tighter. The problem is that visible mold is rarely the first sign. By the time you see it on a wall or smell it in a room, it’s already behind the surface inside wall cavities, under flooring, or in insulation systems that can’t be inspected without the right equipment.
This is why thermal imaging is part of every assessment, not an optional upgrade. A surface that looks and feels dry can have significant moisture content inside the wall assembly. For Bridgehampton estate homes with finished basements, custom millwork, or complex multi-story additions, water can travel far from the original point of entry before stopping. Finding it early and drying it completely is the only way to prevent a water damage job from becoming a full mold remediation project. The cost difference between those two outcomes is significant.
Most standard homeowner’s insurance policies in New York cover wind damage, roof damage, and resulting water intrusion from a covered storm event. What they typically don’t cover and where homeowners often get surprised is flooding from storm surge or rising water, which requires a separate flood insurance policy. For Bridgehampton properties near the Atlantic coast or Mecox Bay, this distinction matters a great deal. If your home took on water because a storm breached the dune line or caused bay flooding, your standard policy may not respond the way you expect.
Beyond the coverage question, how your claim is documented makes an enormous difference in what you actually receive. Insurance adjusters work from documented evidence photos, moisture readings, scope reports, and repair estimates. A contractor who documents damage thoroughly and communicates directly with your adjuster gives your claim the best possible foundation. We have billed insurance companies directly and guided homeowners through the claims process from initial documentation to final settlement that’s confirmed by actual customers, not just a marketing line.
Yes, and this is a real concern in Bridgehampton’s housing stock. The hamlet has a significant number of pre-1978 structures historic farmhouses, older estate homes, and mid-century construction that may contain asbestos insulation, asbestos-containing roofing materials, and lead paint. When a storm cracks walls, disturbs old insulation, or damages original siding, it can expose these materials in a way that creates a genuine health and legal risk.
New York State requires separate, dedicated licenses for mold remediation and asbestos abatement the NYS DOL Mold License and the NYS DOL Asbestos License. Most storm damage contractors don’t hold both. If a contractor without those licenses disturbs asbestos or lead-containing materials during a restoration job, the homeowner can face significant liability in addition to the health risk. We hold all four relevant hazmat credentials NYS DOL Mold, NYS DOL Asbestos, USEPA Lead, and USEPA RRP which means the full scope of storm damage restoration, including any hazardous materials discovered in the process, is handled legally and safely in a single mobilization.
Post-storm contractor fraud is a documented problem in the Hamptons. After major weather events, unlicensed contractors appear, collect deposits, and either do substandard work or disappear entirely leaving homeowners with incomplete repairs, voided insurance claims, and additional costs on top of the original damage. Bridgehampton’s high property values make it a particularly attractive target for this kind of opportunism.
The simplest way to protect yourself is to verify credentials before signing anything. A legitimate storm damage restoration contractor in Suffolk County should hold an active Suffolk County General Contractor license, which is verifiable through the county. If the scope of work includes mold remediation or work on a pre-1978 structure, the NYS DOL Mold License and NYS DOL Asbestos License are required also verifiable. IICRC certification, the industry standard for water damage and restoration technicians, is searchable directly at IICRC.org. We hold all of these credentials, and every one of them can be checked independently. If a contractor can’t provide verifiable license numbers, that’s your answer before the conversation goes any further.
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