There’s visible storm damage the wet carpet, the ceiling stain, the water pooling in the corner of your basement. Then there’s what you can’t see: moisture sitting inside a 1950s brick wall, mold starting behind drywall within 48 hours, structural wood quietly absorbing what the surface inspection missed. In Corona, where the majority of homes were built before 1960 and the neighborhood sits in one of the lowest terrain corridors in central Queens, that hidden damage is almost always present after a significant rain event.
When storm damage is handled correctly fully dried, properly documented, and restored to pre-loss condition you stop the problem from compounding. No mold remediation bill six months from now. No structural repairs that dwarf what the original cleanup would have cost. No insurance dispute because the scope of loss wasn’t documented properly from the start.
For homeowners near the Flushing Meadows–Corona Park boundary, where stormwater backs up into residential blocks when the park’s drainage infrastructure is overwhelmed, that means getting ahead of the damage fast. Every hour matters when water is sitting in a pre-war building with aging materials that absorb moisture quickly and dry slowly.
We’re a fully licensed, New York City-based restoration and general contracting company with more than 5,000 completed projects across the five boroughs and surrounding metro area. We hold an active NYC General Contractor license, NYS DOL Mold License, NYS DOL Asbestos License, USEPA Lead and RRP Certification, NYC BIC Trade Waste License, and IICRC Water Damage Certification. In a neighborhood like Corona where most of the housing stock predates 1978 and lead paint and asbestos are statistically common those aren’t credentials we mention for show. They’re the legal requirements for doing this work safely and correctly.
We’re not a franchise operator covering this territory from another zip code. We’re a New York company that knows what a 1950s brick walkup near Roosevelt Avenue looks like after a nor’easter, and we know exactly what it takes to restore it properly. From the first emergency call to the final inspection, you deal with one company, one contract, and one point of accountability.
The first step is stabilization. If there’s active water intrusion, a compromised roof, or structural exposure, we address that immediately board-up, roof tarping, debris removal, whatever the situation requires. In Corona’s dense residential blocks, where a single building often houses multiple families across basement and upper-floor units, getting that stabilization done fast is critical. Water doesn’t wait, and neither do we.
Once the property is secure, we move into extraction and drying. That means commercial-grade water extraction, industrial air movers, and dehumidification equipment placed strategically based on moisture mapping not guesswork. We use moisture meters and thermal imaging to find where water has migrated inside your walls, above your ceilings, and beneath your floors. In older brick construction common throughout Corona, water travels in ways that aren’t obvious from the surface, and we document all of it for your insurance claim.
From there, we move into remediation and reconstruction. If mold is present or at risk of developing which New York State’s Article 32 law requires be handled by a licensed remediator for any area exceeding 10 square feet we address it as part of the same project. Because we hold a NYC General Contractor license, we can take your property all the way from emergency stabilization to finished, move-back-in-ready condition without handing you off to a separate contractor. We also file all required NYC Department of Buildings permits for structural repairs, so the work is legal, documented, and done right.
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Storm damage restoration in Corona isn’t a simple job. The neighborhood’s pre-war housing stock, the chronic stormwater drainage deficit near the Long Island Expressway corridor, and the proximity to Flushing Meadows–Corona Park one of the most frequently flooded parks in New York City mean that water events here tend to be more severe and more complicated than a standard cleanup job. What we bring to every project reflects that reality.
Every restoration engagement we provide includes emergency response and stabilization, full water extraction and structural drying, moisture mapping and documentation, mold assessment and remediation where required, debris removal under our NYC BIC Trade Waste License, and complete structural repairs and interior reconstruction through our NYC General Contractor license. For properties with pre-1978 construction which is the majority of Corona’s housing stock we handle all lead paint and asbestos protocols under our USEPA RRP and NYS DOL Asbestos certifications. This isn’t optional in New York City. It’s the law, and skipping it exposes you to regulatory liability and health risk.
We also manage the insurance process from start to finish. We bill your insurance company directly, coordinate with adjusters on-site, document the full scope of loss, and advocate if the initial estimate doesn’t cover what the job actually requires. For homeowners filing a storm damage claim for the first time which is common in a neighborhood where many residents haven’t navigated this process before that matters enormously. You focus on your family. We handle the paperwork.
This is one of the most important questions Corona homeowners face after a heavy rain event, and the honest answer is: it depends on your policy and the cause of the flooding. Standard homeowners insurance typically covers sudden and accidental water damage like a storm that drives water through a compromised roof or window. But flooding caused by stormwater runoff or sewer backup, which is exactly what happens in Corona when Flushing Meadows–Corona Park’s drainage infrastructure is overwhelmed and water backs up into adjacent residential blocks, is often excluded from standard policies. That coverage usually requires a separate flood insurance policy through the National Flood Insurance Program or a private carrier, or a sewer backup rider added to your existing policy.
The critical thing to understand is that only 6.9% of buildings damaged by Hurricane Ida in 2021 were inside the 100-year floodplain meaning most of the flooding that hit Corona-area homes happened in areas not designated as flood zones under standard FEMA maps. Many homeowners assumed they didn’t need flood coverage because they weren’t in a mapped flood zone. That assumption cost them significantly. If you’re not sure what your policy covers, we can help you review the claim and work directly with your adjuster to identify every covered category within your policy’s scope.
Mold can begin colonizing within 24 to 48 hours of water intrusion and in the older brick and plaster construction common throughout Corona, it often moves faster than homeowners expect. These buildings weren’t built with modern moisture barriers or vapor control systems. Water gets into wall cavities, soaks into wood framing, and sits in spaces that don’t get airflow. By the time you notice a smell or see discoloration, the mold is typically already well established behind the surface.
The reason this matters practically is that New York State’s Article 32 law requires a licensed mold assessor and a licensed remediator for any mold remediation project exceeding 10 square feet. That’s not a large area it’s roughly the size of a standard interior door. If you hire an unlicensed contractor to handle mold cleanup in your Corona home or apartment building, the work isn’t legally compliant, and any insurance claim tied to that remediation could be challenged. We hold the NYS DOL Mold License required by state law, and mold prevention protocols are built into every water damage restoration job we do not treated as a separate upsell you find out about later.
The most important thing you can do in the first hour is stop additional water from entering the building if it’s safe to do so, and call a restoration company that can get someone there fast. Don’t wait to see how bad it gets. In a neighborhood like Corona, where the terrain near the Long Island Expressway corridor sits at low elevation and the underground drainage system was not designed for the rainfall intensity that modern storms deliver, water can move through a building quickly once it’s inside.
Document everything before cleanup begins photos and video of all visible damage, water levels if there’s standing water, and any property that’s been affected. This documentation is critical for your insurance claim, and the more thorough it is, the stronger your position when the adjuster arrives. Do not throw anything away before it’s been documented and, ideally, reviewed by your contractor and adjuster. After that, your job is to get out of the way and let a licensed restoration team handle the extraction, drying, and assessment. Trying to dry a pre-war brick building with box fans and towels doesn’t work it just gives the moisture more time to migrate deeper into the structure.
Multi-unit properties in Corona and the neighborhood has a significant number of them, including older brick walkups and buildings with basement apartments require a more coordinated restoration approach than a single-family home. The first priority is still stabilization and safety, but the scope of assessment has to account for how water travels between units, through shared wall cavities, and from upper floors to basement levels. What looks like isolated damage in one unit is often connected to water migration affecting multiple floors.
From a regulatory standpoint, all the same requirements apply NYC DOB permits for structural repairs, NYS Article 32 compliance for any mold remediation, USEPA RRP protocols for lead paint in pre-1978 buildings, and NYC BIC licensing for debris removal. As the property owner or building manager, you’re responsible for ensuring the contractor you hire meets all of these requirements. We handle the permit filings, the regulatory compliance, and the insurance coordination on your behalf. For landlords managing buildings where tenants are displaced during restoration, we work to move as efficiently as possible to minimize the time units are uninhabitable because that timeline has real financial consequences for you.
Post-storm contractor fraud is a documented and serious problem in New York City. After a major weather event, unlicensed operators show up in affected neighborhoods offering fast, cheap work and homeowners who are stressed, overwhelmed, and under time pressure sometimes accept those offers without verifying credentials. The FTC logged over 81,000 home repair fraud complaints nationally in 2024, and dense urban neighborhoods are frequently targeted.
Here’s what to verify before you let any contractor into your home in Queens. For structural repairs and reconstruction: an active NYC General Contractor license, verifiable through the NYC DOB’s online license lookup. For mold remediation: a NYS DOL Mold Remediation License, verifiable through the New York State Department of Labor. For work in pre-1978 buildings involving lead paint: USEPA Lead RRP Certification. For asbestos work in pre-1980 buildings: NYS DOL Asbestos Abatement License. For debris removal in New York City: NYC BIC Trade Waste License. Every one of these can be independently verified through government databases not just taken on a contractor’s word. We hold all of them, and we’re happy to provide license numbers for verification before any work begins.
Yes and it’s worth understanding why, because it affects the scope of work and the qualifications your contractor needs to have. Corona’s housing stock has a median construction year of 1959, and a meaningful portion of the neighborhood’s buildings predate 1940. These are brick and masonry structures with flat or low-slope roofs, aging mortar joints, plaster walls, and building envelopes that were never designed to handle the rainfall intensity that climate change is now delivering to central Queens. When water gets into these buildings, it doesn’t behave the way it does in a newer wood-frame suburban home. It migrates through masonry, soaks into plaster, and sits in wall cavities that have no modern moisture control systems.
That complexity has legal implications too. Pre-1978 construction is legally presumed to contain lead-based paint under USEPA regulations, and pre-1980 buildings commonly contain asbestos in pipe insulation, floor tiles, roofing materials, and joint compound. Any storm restoration work that involves demolition or structural repairs in these buildings must be performed by contractors certified to handle both. Hiring someone without those certifications isn’t just a quality risk it’s a regulatory and health risk for everyone in the building. This is one of the reasons why the credentials your contractor carries matter more in a neighborhood like Corona than they might in a newer development elsewhere in Queens.
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