When storm damage hits a Wainscott property, the clock starts immediately. Water behind walls reaches mold-growth conditions within 24 to 48 hours. Every hour of delay on a coastal home where salt air and humidity already accelerate deterioration compounds the damage and the cost. Getting the right crew on-site fast is not about convenience. It is about protecting what the property is actually worth.
For the roughly 55% of Wainscott homeowners whose properties sit unoccupied during the fall and winter storm seasons, that response gap is the real risk. A nor’easter rolls through in November, water gets in through a compromised roof or a wind-blown window, and nobody knows until the damage has been spreading for days. What you get with us is not just faster cleanup it is a documented, professionally managed claim that holds up with your insurance carrier and protects the full value of your property.
The other thing that changes is scope clarity. Storm damage on a South Fork estate especially near Georgica Pond or along Beach Lane in Wainscott, where documented flooding has occurred often involves more than what’s visible on the surface. Saltwater intrusion, structural saturation, and hidden moisture in wall cavities require thermal imaging and professional moisture mapping to catch before they become a much larger problem. You walk away knowing the full picture, not just what was obvious from the outside.
We’ve been operating across Suffolk County for over 12 years, with more than 5,000 completed restoration projects across Long Island. That includes properties throughout Wainscott the kind of coastal estates, historic farmhouses, and high-value seasonal homes that make up most of the hamlet’s housing stock. CEO Jessica Dussan and VP Leo Torres run the company personally, and that accountability shows up in how jobs are managed from the first call to the final walkthrough.
What separates us from most restoration contractors is the licensing stack. NYS DOL Mold License. NYS DOL Asbestos License. USEPA Lead and RRP certifications. Suffolk County General Contractor license. IICRC-certified technicians. For a Wainscott property including older farmhouses along Main Street that may contain asbestos or lead paint that full credential set is not a bonus. It is what legally allows the work to be done correctly and completely under one contractor, without gaps in accountability.
It starts with emergency dispatch. When you call, we mobilize a crew immediately day or night. The first priority on arrival is securing the property: tarping damaged roofing, boarding compromised openings, and stopping any active water intrusion. For a seasonal home in Wainscott that may have been unoccupied when the storm hit, this step also includes a full exterior and interior assessment so you have an accurate picture of what happened, documented with photos and moisture readings from the start.
From there, extraction and structural drying begin. We use industrial-grade equipment and thermal imaging to identify moisture that has migrated into wall cavities, insulation, and subfloor assemblies the hidden damage that causes mold and structural deterioration if it goes undetected. In a coastal environment like Wainscott, where Atlantic humidity is already elevated year-round, this step is not optional. It is what keeps a water intrusion event from becoming a mold remediation job six weeks later.
Once the structure is dry and stable, the restoration phase begins structural repairs, roofing, interior work, and finishing. Because we handle mold remediation, asbestos abatement, and lead work under the same roof, there is no handoff to a separate contractor mid-project. All permit applications with the East Hampton Town Building Department are handled as part of the process. You are kept informed throughout, and insurance documentation is prepared in a format your adjuster can work with directly.
Ready to get started?
Storm damage restoration in Wainscott covers a wider range of services than most homeowners expect going in. It is rarely just a roof repair or a water extraction. A storm that sends surge up Beach Lane or breaches the dune near Wainscott Pond the way Hurricane Sandy did in 2012 can introduce saltwater contamination, structural saturation, and biological hazards that require specialized handling. We provide emergency board-up and tarping, debris and tree removal, roof damage repair, water extraction and structural drying, mold remediation, asbestos and lead abatement for older properties, structural stabilization, interior restoration, and complete insurance claim documentation.
For Wainscott’s older farmhouses and estate properties, the asbestos and lead abatement capability matters more than most homeowners initially realize. Storm damage that disturbs pre-1978 construction materials whether through structural impact, water intrusion, or demolition during repairs can create a legal and health-safety obligation that only a licensed abatement contractor can fulfill. We hold the NYS DOL licenses required to identify, contain, and remove those materials legally, so the restoration does not create a new problem in the process of solving the original one.
Direct insurance billing is built into every job. We work directly with your insurance carrier preparing documentation, communicating with adjusters, and billing the insurer so that you are not managing that process from Manhattan or wherever you are when the storm hits. For the high-value seasonal properties that define Wainscott’s housing market, that capability is what makes a complicated, high-stakes claim manageable.
The first thing to do is call a licensed restoration contractor who can get to the property immediately and document the damage before anything is touched. This matters for two reasons. First, your insurance carrier will want documentation of the damage in its post-storm state photos, moisture readings, and a written assessment. If you or someone else starts moving things or making repairs before that documentation is complete, it can create disputes about what the storm actually caused versus what happened afterward. Second, water damage that is not immediately extracted and dried will reach mold-growth conditions within 24 to 48 hours in a coastal environment like Wainscott, where ambient humidity is already elevated.
We can dispatch immediately day or night to a Wainscott property, even when the owner is not on-site. Our crew will secure the property, assess and document the full scope of damage, begin extraction and drying, and communicate directly with your insurance carrier. For seasonal homeowners managing a property remotely from the city, that end-to-end capability is what makes the difference between a contained restoration and a months-long problem.
This is one of the most important questions for any Wainscott homeowner to understand before a storm hits, not after. Standard homeowner’s insurance policies do not cover flooding caused by storm surge or rising water from an external source including the Atlantic Ocean or Georgica Pond. That type of damage is covered under a separate flood insurance policy, typically through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) or a private flood carrier. Wind-driven rain that enters through a damaged roof or window is generally covered under standard homeowner’s insurance, but the line between wind damage and flood damage can become a point of dispute with adjusters after a major coastal storm.
For properties in Wainscott’s documented flood zones including areas near Beach Lane and the Georgica Pond shoreline having both a homeowner’s policy and a separate flood policy is not optional if you want full coverage. Our team understands how to document storm damage in a way that clearly distinguishes wind and water intrusion damage from flood-origin damage, which is essential to getting both claims handled correctly. If you are unsure what your current policies cover, that is a conversation worth having with your insurance agent before the next storm season.
Mold can begin developing within 24 to 48 hours of water intrusion under the right conditions and Wainscott’s coastal environment provides those conditions consistently. The combination of Atlantic humidity, warm summer temperatures, and the salt air that accelerates material degradation means that water left in wall cavities, insulation, or subfloor assemblies moves toward mold growth faster than it would in an inland home. A storm event in August or September peak hurricane season on the South Fork can introduce moisture into a structure that is already at elevated ambient humidity, and the timeline compresses quickly.
The problem is that the water you can see is rarely all the water that is there. Wind-driven rain and storm surge can saturate wall assemblies, travel along framing members, and pool in areas that look completely dry on the surface. We use thermal imaging and professional moisture mapping equipment to locate that hidden moisture and document its extent before drying begins. Catching it in the first 24 to 48 hours is what keeps a storm damage restoration from becoming a full mold remediation project which is a significantly more invasive and expensive process, especially in a high-value Wainscott estate with custom finishes and premium interior materials.
Yes. Wainscott falls under the jurisdiction of the East Hampton Town Building Department, and most structural repairs resulting from storm damage require a building permit before work begins. This includes roof repairs that involve structural components, any work that affects load-bearing walls or framing, and repairs that change the footprint or envelope of the structure. The East Hampton Town Code Chapter 102 governs building construction standards for all properties in the hamlet, including Wainscott.
For properties near Georgica Pond or the Atlantic Ocean, there may be additional review requirements under the Town’s natural resources and wetlands regulations particularly for any work that involves grading, clearing, or construction near the coastal zone. After major storm events, the East Hampton Building Department and Director of Natural Resources typically see a surge in permit applications, which can create processing delays. Working with a contractor who understands East Hampton Town’s permitting process and can pull permits correctly from the start prevents the kind of compliance issues that stall a restoration at the worst possible time. We handle permit applications as part of the restoration process, so that step does not fall on the homeowner to manage independently.
The most important credentials to verify are the ones that are legally required for the scope of work. In New York, mold remediation requires a NYS DOL Mold License not just a general contractor who says they “handle mold.” Asbestos abatement requires a separate NYS DOL Asbestos License. Lead paint work requires USEPA Lead and RRP certification. For structural repairs in Wainscott specifically, the contractor must hold a Suffolk County General Contractor license, which is the operative credential for work in East Hampton Town. IICRC certification for water damage technicians is the industry standard recognized by insurance carriers and indicates training in professional drying and restoration protocols.
Beyond credentials, the practical questions matter just as much. Can they respond immediately, or are they booking jobs days out? Do they bill insurance directly, or do you have to manage that yourself? Do they use thermal imaging to find hidden moisture, or do they only address what is visible? For a high-value seasonal property in Wainscott where the owner may be off-site and the property may have older construction materials the answers to those questions determine whether you get a complete, professionally managed restoration or a partial fix that leaves problems behind.
Yes, and for many of Wainscott’s older properties, this is a critical part of the restoration process. Several historic farmhouses along Wainscott Main Street and throughout the hamlet date to the 1700s and 1800s, and properties built before 1978 may contain asbestos-containing materials in insulation, floor tiles, roofing, or joint compounds. They may also contain lead-based paint in original woodwork, windows, and exterior siding. When storm damage requires demolition, structural repair, or the disturbance of original building materials, those hazardous materials become a legal and health-safety issue not just a restoration consideration.
In New York State, you cannot legally perform mold remediation without a NYS DOL Mold License, and you cannot legally disturb or remove asbestos-containing materials without a NYS DOL Asbestos License. Many general restoration contractors do not hold both of these licenses, which means they either cannot legally do the work or they subcontract it to a third party creating gaps in accountability and project management. We hold the full licensing stack required to handle hazardous material identification, containment, and abatement as part of the restoration so the entire job stays under one contractor, from emergency response through final restoration, without handoffs that slow the process or create liability for the homeowner.
Useful Links