Flood cleanup in Aventura: what to know
Aventura's residential stock is dominated by high-rise condominiums built from the 1970s through the 2000s, where shared risers, in-unit plumbing, and balcony or curtain-wall seams are the primary water-damage exposure — a leak in one unit can travel down through several floors before it's caught.
Sitting between the Atlantic Ocean and the Intracoastal Waterway, Aventura carries real hurricane-season and storm-surge exposure at ground level and in podium/parking structures, and constant salt-air exposure accelerates window-seal and balcony-door degradation, making exterior water intrusion a more frequent issue here than in inland neighbourhoods.
Water damage risk factors in Aventura
Common causes of water damage in this area: High-rise in-unit plumbing failure (upstairs-unit leak); Storm surge / coastal flooding; Curtain-wall / balcony envelope water intrusion; Hurricane/tropical storm water intrusion.
We serve Aventura Mall, Intracoastal Waterway, Turnberry Isle Resort, William Lehman Causeway and the wider Aventura area across ZIP codes 33160, 33180.
Signs you need flood cleanup
- Property affected by storm surge, river or stream flooding, or overland runoff from heavy rain
- Any floodwater that has entered through the ground, foundation, or below-grade entry points
- Visible sediment, mud, or debris deposited by receding floodwater
- Sewage odour or visible sewage contamination mixed with floodwater
- Floodwater that has been standing for more than several hours before cleanup begins
- Power has been shut off due to flood safety concerns and professional restoration is required before re-energising
- Flood insurance claim requiring documented Category 3 cleanup protocol
How we handle flood cleanup in Aventura
Flood cleanup is distinct from routine water damage restoration because external flooding — from storm surge, river overflow, or overland runoff — is classified as Category 3 (grossly contaminated) water under IICRC S500 regardless of its appearance. Floodwater carries sewage, chemical contaminants, agricultural runoff, and biological hazards that render all porous materials it contacts non-salvageable. This is not a judgment call; it is a standard that exists to protect both occupants and workers.
The practical implication of Category 3 classification is significant: drywall, carpet, carpet pad, and insulation that has been in contact with floodwater for more than a very short period (typically under 24 hours with clean-flood conditions) must be removed and disposed of. Wood framing and structural components can be dried and treated but must be thoroughly disinfected first. The goal of flood cleanup is to remove all Category 3-contaminated materials, disinfect the structure, and then proceed with structural drying as if the event were a Category 1 loss.