A burst pipe in Highlands isn’t just a plumbing problem. It’s water inside your walls, under your floors, and potentially inside insulation that’s been there since before you moved in. The damage compounds fast — mold can start growing within 24 to 48 hours of a water intrusion event, and in a home with older construction, it doesn’t stay visible. It hides.
What you actually want is simple: a dry home, no mold, no open walls, and an insurance claim that doesn’t drag on for months. That’s the outcome — not just a crew with fans running for a week and a bill you didn’t expect.
Highlands has a specific problem that most restoration companies don’t talk about. The Village of Highland Falls runs on aging galvanized and brass service laterals that the village’s own water superintendent has acknowledged are well past their useful life. When those pipes go, they don’t just drip — they rupture. And at an elevation of over 1,000 feet, with winters that regularly push below 20°F, freeze events in Highlands hit earlier, last longer, and cause more damage than communities sitting lower along the Hudson. If your home was built before 1980, there’s also a real chance that opening the walls means dealing with asbestos-containing materials — something most restoration companies either ignore or hand off to a separate vendor. We handle it in-house, which means no scheduling gap, no second contractor, and no delay in getting your home back.
We’ve been doing environmental restoration work in Orange County and the broader Hudson Valley for over 12 years. That means we’ve worked in communities throughout Highlands with exactly the kind of aging building stock you find in Highland Falls and Fort Montgomery — older homes, older pipes, older walls that need careful handling before anyone starts cutting.
We’re NYS and NYC M/WBE certified, fully insured including liability and workers’ compensation, and hold a New York State Mold Remediation Contractor License. These aren’t optional credentials in this industry — they’re what separates a company that can legally and safely do this work from one that can’t. We also work directly with the NYS Office of General Services, which means we’ve cleared procurement standards that most private contractors never face.
Our 100% satisfaction guarantee isn’t a throwaway line. It’s backed by more than a decade of standing behind our work in this region — and in a business built on referrals and repeat calls, that track record means something.
It starts with the call. We run a true 24/7 emergency line — not an answering service, not a next-day callback. When you call at 2 AM on a January night in Highland Falls, someone picks up and a crew gets moving. The first priority is stopping the damage from spreading: water extraction, containment, and an initial moisture assessment to find where the water has traveled inside the structure.
From there, commercial-grade drying equipment goes in — not just fans, but calibrated dehumidifiers and moisture meters that track what’s happening inside walls and under flooring where you can’t see it. If the structure was built before 1980, an asbestos assessment happens before any walls are opened. This is a legal requirement in New York for pre-1980 buildings, and we handle it in-house rather than subcontracting out. In Highlands, where a significant portion of the housing stock in Highland Falls and Fort Montgomery predates that threshold, this step matters more than most homeowners realize.
Once the structure is confirmed dry and safe, reconstruction begins. Drywall, flooring, insulation, trim — whatever the pipe damage required opening gets rebuilt to pre-loss condition. The Town of Highlands Building Department requires permits for structural restoration work, and we manage that process as part of the job. Throughout all of it, we’re handling the insurance documentation and adjuster communication so you’re not the one translating damage reports into claim language.
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Most restoration companies in the Highlands service area — including the national franchise operators and the regional competitors you’ll find on a quick search — stop at remediation. They extract the water, run the equipment, and leave. Reconstruction is someone else’s problem. We cover the full arc: emergency water extraction, moisture mapping, structural drying, mold remediation, asbestos abatement when required, and complete reconstruction back to pre-loss condition.
For Highlands homeowners dealing with the aftermath of a burst pipe in an older home near West Point or along Route 9W in Fort Montgomery, the asbestos piece is not a minor detail. Pre-1980 construction commonly contains asbestos in pipe insulation, floor tiles, ceiling tiles, and joint compound. Disturbing those materials without proper abatement is a legal violation under New York State law and a real health risk. Because we handle abatement in-house, that step doesn’t add a second contractor, a separate timeline, or a cost negotiation you weren’t expecting.
On the insurance side, we work directly with carriers — documenting damage, communicating with adjusters, and advocating for a fair scope throughout the claims process. Real customers have described this as the most valuable part of working with us, especially in a community where many residents are navigating a major insurance claim for the first time. And if there’s a gap between what insurance covers and what the job costs, financing up to $200,000 at 0% APR means cost is never the reason remediation gets delayed — which is the one delay that reliably turns a manageable problem into a mold remediation project.
The first thing is to shut off the water supply — find your main shutoff and close it. If you don’t know where it is, call a plumber or your water provider immediately. In the Village of Highland Falls, homeowners are responsible for maintaining their own service laterals under Chapter 235 of the village water code, so that lateral — from the main to your home — is your responsibility if it fails.
Once the water is off, call a restoration company before you start pulling up wet carpet or opening walls yourself. The reason is straightforward: water travels further than it looks. It moves through wall cavities, under flooring, into insulation, and into subfloor material. If your home was built before 1980 — which covers a significant portion of the housing stock in Highlands — opening walls without an asbestos assessment first is both a health risk and a legal issue under New York State law. A professional assessment tells you what you’re actually dealing with before anyone starts cutting.
In most cases, yes — sudden and accidental pipe bursts are covered under standard homeowners insurance policies in New York. What insurers distinguish is between sudden failures and gradual damage. If a pipe burst because of a freeze event or a sudden rupture, that’s typically a covered claim. If there’s evidence that a slow leak was ignored over time, carriers may dispute coverage.
The more common problem in Highlands isn’t whether coverage exists — it’s whether the scope of the claim gets documented correctly. Adjusters work from the documentation they receive, and if the damage inside walls and under flooring isn’t captured with moisture readings, photos, and a proper scope of loss, you can end up with a settlement that doesn’t cover the full cost of restoration. We handle all of that documentation and communicate directly with your adjuster throughout the process, which is particularly valuable when you’re dealing with the kind of extensive water intrusion that aging galvanized pipe failures in Highlands can produce.
Mold can begin growing on wet building materials within 24 to 48 hours of a water intrusion event. That window is not a worst-case estimate — it’s what the EPA and FEMA both document as the standard growth threshold under normal indoor conditions. In Highlands, where older homes with less ventilated wall cavities are common throughout Highland Falls and Fort Montgomery, the conditions for mold growth can develop even faster once moisture gets behind drywall or into insulation.
The problem is that mold in its early stages isn’t always visible. It grows inside wall cavities, under flooring, and in insulation before it ever shows up on a surface. A musty smell is often the first sign, but by the time you’re smelling it, the colony is already established. Professional moisture mapping — using thermal imaging and calibrated moisture meters — can detect elevated moisture levels inside walls and floors without opening them first, which is how a restoration company determines whether mold remediation is needed and where. Waiting to see if it develops on its own is the one thing that reliably makes the situation worse.
It depends on the scope of the work. If the restoration involves structural repairs — replacing drywall, rebuilding framing, replacing flooring systems, or any work that touches the building’s structure — a permit is required from the Town of Highlands Building Department. The building department operates under Building Inspector Philip Hannawalt and is open Monday through Wednesday and Friday during regular business hours.
For straightforward water extraction and drying, permits are typically not required. But most burst pipe events that involve wall openings, subfloor replacement, or structural drying in older homes do cross into permit territory. We manage the permit process as part of the restoration scope, which means you’re not tracking down the building department, filling out forms, or waiting on inspections while your home sits partially open. It’s one less thing to manage during what is already a disruptive situation.
Possibly — and it’s worth finding out before anyone opens your walls. Asbestos was commonly used in pipe insulation, floor tiles, ceiling tiles, and joint compound in homes built before 1980. It was also used in some pipe materials themselves, particularly in older service laterals. The Village of Highland Falls has a documented aging pipe infrastructure, and many homes in Highlands were constructed during the era when asbestos use in building materials was standard.
The presence of asbestos doesn’t mean your home is dangerous in its current state — asbestos that is intact and undisturbed generally doesn’t pose a health risk. The risk comes from disturbing it during renovation or restoration work. Under New York State law, asbestos abatement in pre-1980 structures must be performed by a licensed contractor under the NYS Department of Labor’s Asbestos Safety and Training Program. We hold this capability in-house, which means that when a burst pipe in your older Highlands home requires wall access, the asbestos question gets answered and handled by the same team doing the restoration — not a separate vendor on a separate timeline.
Yes — and that distinction matters more than most homeowners realize when they’re in the middle of a burst pipe event. Most restoration companies operating in the Highlands area stop at remediation. They extract the water, run drying equipment, and then the project ends with open walls and a referral to a general contractor. That means you’re coordinating a second vendor, managing a second schedule, and navigating a second billing relationship — while potentially living in a home with unfinished walls and missing flooring.
We handle the full scope: emergency response, water extraction, structural drying, mold remediation, asbestos abatement when required, and complete reconstruction back to pre-loss condition. For Highlands residents — particularly in Highland Falls and Fort Montgomery, where older homes and aging infrastructure make multi-phase restoration the norm rather than the exception — having one company manage the entire process from emergency call to finished room eliminates the coordination gap that most homeowners don’t anticipate until they’re already stuck in it. The project isn’t done until your home looks and functions the way it did before the pipe burst.
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