Mold Removal, Remediation & Testing Farmington, CT - Green Restoration

Mold Removal, Remediation & Testing Farmington, CT

Farmington River AE Homes Cleared, Lab-Verified Results 60-Minute Response, Direct Insurance Billing

IICRC Certified badgeIICRC Certified
Owner On Every Job badgeOwner On Every Job
(860) 222-9498

EcoEco-Friendly Solutions For Healthier Spaces

Reviewed by David Megeneishvili · Licensed & Insured In CT · IICRC AMRT + WRT

4.9★Google Rating124 verified reviews
60 minResponse TargetSame-day across 860 service area
5,000+Properties RestoredCT · NY · MA
24/7Emergency ServiceDay Or Night
Mold Remediation Services

Complete Mold Remediation In Farmington, CT

Every Farmington mold scope contained by IICRC S520 crews dispatched across Hartford County in 2026.

Heavy black mold colonization across OSB plywood roof sheathing between 2x6 wood rafters with pink fiberglass insulation below in a Farmington Connecticut attic, documented during a same-day Green Restoration IICRC S520 mold inspection
IICRCS520 Containment
HEPANegative-Air Filtration

Additional Mold Remediation Services In Farmington

Full Mold Remediation And Removal

Containment, physical tear-out, antimicrobial treatment, and source correction sequenced per IICRC S520. Farmington Village plaster cavities, Unionville framing, and Devonwood vapor barriers each demand different removal protocols. The Farmington River + Unionville mill moisture source is corrected with drainage or interior perimeter work before close-up, because mold always returns when source remains.

HVAC And Duct Mold Cleaning

NADCA ACR-aligned HVAC mold cleaning for Farmington Village gravity systems and UConn Health commercial corridor forced-air. The Farmington River + Unionville mill July-August dew point spikes push condensate mold into evaporator coils and trunk lines. Coil cleaning, antimicrobial fog, and HEPA-vacuumed boots clear the system before re-circulation across Farmington property classes.

Attic Mold Cleanup

Farmington attic mold tracks bath-fan dump and Farmington River + Unionville mill humidity. Farmington Village rafter cavities, Tunxis Village ranch sheathing, and Unionville attic stock each get assembly-specific HEPA scrub, soda or media blast on OSB, and ventilation rebalancing. Ridge runoff and ice-dam moisture feed recurrence when source correction is incomplete.

Basement Mold Cleanup

Farmington Village cellars and Devonwood basements carry the heaviest mold scope in town. IICRC S520 containment, plaster or drywall tear-out to studs, framing antimicrobial treatment, and dehumidification down to 16% MC. The Farmington River + Unionville mill capillary wicking is corrected with exterior drainage or interior perimeter dimple before close-up.

Bathroom And Kitchen Mold Removal

Farmington Village bath additions and Tunxis Village tile-tub surrounds both hide mold behind grout, fixtures, and plaster. IICRC S520 containment, tile and substrate removal, framing inspection with Tramex, and antimicrobial treatment. Unionville kitchen sink-base cabinets get plumbing leak correction before reframe across the Farmington River + Unionville mill housing stock.

Crawlspace Mold Remediation

Tunxis Village and UConn Health crawl spaces along the Farmington River + Unionville mill watershed colonize joists within 72 hours of flood events. HEPA scrub, Tyvek-suited removal of contaminated insulation, framing antimicrobial per IICRC S520, and 6 mil vapor barrier with mechanical dehumidification stop recurrence in the Farmington stock.

Don't Let Mold Spread Another 24 Hours. Same-Day Inspection.

Why Choose Us In Farmington

Owner-led mold remediation with same-day inspection, lab-verified clearance testing, and hospital-grade containment across Farmington and Hartford County.

Same-Day Mold Inspection

IICRC S520 certified inspectors arrive same day with thermal imaging, moisture meters, and ACAC air sampling kits.

Sameday dispatch

IICRC S520 Containment

Sealed plastic sheeting, negative air pressure, and HEPA-filtered scrubbers isolate every mold work area from the rest of your home.

S520certified protocol

Benefect + Concrobium Antimicrobials

EPA-registered Benefect Decon-30 botanical disinfectant and Concrobium Mold Control treat every framing surface after physical removal, no harsh fumes.

EPAregistered botanical

Lab-Verified Clearance Testing

Third-party ACAC air sampling confirms post-remediation spore counts at or below outdoor baseline before you re-occupy.

Labverified spore counts
Understanding The Risk

What Untreated Mold Costs Your Farmington Home

Farmington sits along the Farmington River with UConn Health, Unionville, and Cherry Park anchoring 1700-1850 colonial estate stock alongside post-war suburban subdivisions, so mold pressure compounds across rubble-stone cellars and shallow crawl spaces along the river corridor faster than newer Hartford County towns.

Farmington River Corridor Basement Pressure

Unionville And Riverside Most At Risk

Farmington neighborhoods along the Farmington River and the Tunxis floodplain sit in flood-prone valley terrain, and seasonal rises push groundwater behind foundation walls along Unionville, Riverside, and the Mountain Spring Road corridor. Spores colonize damp drywall and colonial plaster cavities within 48 hours of every saturation event, often months before any visible stain reaches the finished side.

Farmington Center 1700-1850 Colonial Estate Stock

Pre-Revolutionary Estate Stock Across The Center

Farmington Center, Mountain Road, and the High Street historic district carry 1700-1850 colonial estate homes with rubble-stone foundations, plaster-on-lath walls, and timber framing. Water that enters at slate valley failures or copper-gutter joints travels unimpeded through stud bays, growing mold on the back side of plaster long before any stain appears on these high-value estate properties.

UConn Health Area Coil Mold

Mixed Institutional-Residential Off Route 4

The UConn Health corridor and Route 4 commercial-residential area include 1970-1995 office buildings and faculty housing with forced-air systems where Farmington River corridor humidity stays trapped in shared mechanical risers and trunk lines. A single neglected coil leak becomes a building-wide air quality problem within weeks across these Farmington properties.

Cherry Park Crawl Spaces Sit Near The Tunxis Floodplain

Cherry Park And Tunxis Most Exposed

Cherry Park, Tunxis, and the Garden Street corridor are full of post-war ranches built on shallow crawl spaces along the Farmington River floodplain. Persistent corridor ground moisture wicks up through joists and subfloor, growing surface mold across the underside of the house every summer in Farmington.

Disclosure Required On Resale

CT Law Protects Buyers, Not Sellers

Connecticut residential property disclosure law requires mold history reporting on every sale. Professional remediation with lab-verified clearance documentation protects your Farmington listing value, whether you are selling a Farmington Center colonial estate, a Unionville mill cottage, or a Cherry Park ranch on the open market.

Stachybotrys In Farmington Center Estate Cellars

Colonial Estate Finished Cellars Hold Highest Risk

Cellars off Mountain Road, High Street, and the older sections in the Farmington Center historic district have run chronic seasonal seepage behind finished walls for centuries. The result is toxic Stachybotrys colonization that requires sealed double-layer containment, negative air pressure, and clearance testing to remove safely under IICRC S520 protocol.

Green Restoration technician in full Tyvek PPE and respirator treating an attic with visible black mold across the roof sheathing and rafters during active IICRC S520 mold remediation
Local Expertise

Why Farmington Properties Need Professional Mold Remediation

Farmington conditions create mold pressure surface cleaning cannot solve. Hospital-grade containment with ACAC clearance and Farmington River corridor source correction is the only durable fix.

Green Restoration technician in branded PPE applying EPA-registered antimicrobial treatment to an exposed wall cavity during IICRC S520 mold remediation
1

IICRC S520, AMRT, And WRT Certified Farmington Crews

Every Green Restoration mold crew is IICRC S520 certified, and our owner carries IICRC AMRT and WRT credentials. We have remediated Farmington Center colonial estate plaster cavities, Unionville mill-cottage stacks, Cherry Park crawl spaces, and UConn Health area HVAC scopes. The certification is the floor for Hartford County work.

2

Same-Day Inspection Across Farmington And The Hartford County Corridor

A technician is on site in Farmington the same day you call, whether you are near the Farmington River in Unionville, in Farmington Center on Mountain Road, in Cherry Park, or near UConn Health. We bring thermal imaging, Tramex moisture meters, and ACAC-certified air sampling kits on the first visit so scope is documented before any pricing conversation starts.

3

Moisture Source Corrected, Not Just Covered

Most mold comes back because the leak, humidity, or ventilation problem was never solved. We coordinate directly with slate roofers, plumbers, and HVAC contractors on Farmington Center colonial estate properties and Farmington River corridor basements so the root cause is fixed before we close the wall, with David's AMRT and WRT training informing every source-correction decision.

4

Lab-Verified Clearance For Your Adjuster File

Every Farmington mold job closes with third-party air sampling and written clearance at or below outdoor baseline. The file we deliver includes scope, containment photos, lab reports, and the IICRC-standard documentation that major carriers including Liberty Mutual, Allstate, State Farm, Travelers, Hartford Insurance, USAA, and Chubb work with for clean approval.

Common Mold Problems, Handled

The Mold We See Most in Farmington

These are the mold problems we remediate most often, every job run to the IICRC S520 standard, contained with HEPA negative air, and cleared by independent ACAC air testing.

Black mold spreading across poured concrete foundation walls in a damp basement during IICRC S520 mold remediation in a Connecticut home
01/ 05
Basement & Wall Mold
Basement Wall Mold, Fully Removed
Local Note

In Farmington, recurring seepage reaches Farmington River AE basements and Unionville mill-cottage cellars below grade.

The Situation

Chronic humidity, a sump failure, or seepage through the slab edge and foundation wall keeps a basement damp enough for mold to spread across concrete, framing, and stored belongings. On finished basements the same moisture colonizes the back of drywall and the wall cavity long before any stain reaches the room.

How We Remediate It

Our crews set sealed containment with negative air pressure and HEPA-filtered air scrubbers, then remove or HEPA-clean the affected materials and treat the foundation wall and framing with an EPA-registered antimicrobial per IICRC S520. The moisture source, seepage, a failed sump, or high humidity, is corrected and dehumidification is set before anything is closed back up.

Cleared To Standard

Third-party ACAC air sampling confirms spore counts at or below the outdoor baseline before reconstruction begins. Every scope line, containment photo, and lab report is documented for your insurer so the claim moves on evidence.

IICRC S520 ContainmentHEPA Negative AirACAC Clearance Tested
1 / 5

Scenario 1 of 5: Basement & Wall Mold

Emergency Mold Guide

What To Do When You Find Mold In Your Home

The first 24 hours matter. Follow these steps to contain the colony and protect your air quality while waiting for our IICRC S520 certified crew to arrive.

What To Do Immediately

1
Call Certified Remediation If Growth Exceeds 10 Sq Ft

EPA guidelines recommend professional remediation for any visible mold patch larger than a 3x3 square foot area. Anything more releases spores beyond safe DIY containment.

2
Contain The Affected Area

Close doors leading to the contaminated room and turn off HVAC immediately. Every minute of shared air movement spreads spores throughout the rest of your home.

3
Document Everything With Photos

Take timestamped photos of all visible mold and any related water damage before cleanup begins. Your insurance adjuster will need this for the claim file.

4
Wear N95, Gloves & Eye Protection

If you must enter the contaminated area before remediators arrive, wear an N95 respirator, nitrile gloves, and sealed eye protection. Skin and airway contact with active colonies is how symptoms start.

5
Address The Moisture Source First

Mold needs water to grow. Fix the leak, correct the humidity, or remediate the flood before any cleanup attempt. Scrubbing without moisture correction guarantees regrowth.

6
Request Clearance Testing After Remediation

Third-party post-remediation air sampling confirms spore counts are at or below outdoor baseline. Without it, you have no way to verify the work actually worked.

What NOT To Do

Do NOT Spray Bleach On Porous Surfaces

Bleach lifts color on drywall, carpet, and wood but does not kill mold at the root. The colony returns within weeks and the stain looks smaller only because the surface is lighter.

Do NOT Run Whole-House HVAC

Central heating and cooling circulates spores through every duct run, colonizing rooms that were never affected. Shut the system off until professional containment is in place.

Do NOT Attempt Removal Over 10 Sq Ft

EPA guidelines require professional containment for anything larger than a 3x3 patch. Tearing out drywall without negative air pressure releases millions of spores instantly.

Do NOT Paint Over Visible Mold

Even mildew-resistant primer cannot seal an active colony. The mold feeds on the paper backing of drywall and bleeds through within weeks, often worse than before.

Do NOT Ignore Musty Odors

A persistent musty smell without visible mold almost always means a hidden colony behind walls, under flooring, or in ductwork. Smell usually precedes visibility by months.

Do NOT Remove Materials Without Containment

Disturbed mold releases millions of spores in seconds. Ripping carpet, pulling drywall, or breaking up tile without proper negative air pressure contaminates the entire home.

Our Process

Our Mold Remediation Process In Farmington, CT

From the first call to final walkthrough, every step is documented, insured, and owner-supervised.

Green Restoration owner measuring moisture with a Tramex meter during a same-day mold inspection in a Farmington CT home
01Current Step
5 StepsStart to Finish
100%Owner-Supervised
DirectInsurance Billing
Service Area

Mold Remediation Coverage In Farmington, CT

Full service mold inspection, containment, remediation, and lab-verified clearance testing for Farmington homes and businesses. Same-day inspection response across Hartford County.

Neighborhoods We Serve In Farmington
Farmington CenterUnionvilleCherry ParkTunxisMountain RoadHigh StreetLovely StreetGarden StreetRiversideScott Swamp

Green Restoration provides IICRC S520 certified mold remediation in Farmington, CT, serving local neighborhoods throughout Hartford County. Our certified technicians arrive same day with thermal imaging, moisture meters, and ACAC-certified air sampling kits. We work directly with all major insurance carriers, from initial inspection through hospital-grade containment and lab-verified clearance testing.

As a service-area business led by our owner across Hartford County, our crews know the specific mold conditions Farmington properties face. We coordinate directly with adjusters from Liberty Mutual, State Farm, Travelers, Allstate, USAA, Chubb, Hartford Insurance Group, and all other major carriers, documenting scope from inspection through ACAC clearance for every claim across Farmington and surrounding Hartford County. Green Restoration is not a licensed public adjuster and does not negotiate claims on your behalf.

Active Mold Exposure In Farmington?

Same-day inspection dispatch, 24/7/365.

(860) 222-9498

IICRC S520 · Licensed & Insured · HIC.0668405

Serving Farmington (06032) & Nearby Towns

All Towns Served By Green Restoration Of Hartford For IICRC S520 Mold Inspection And Remediation.

Hours Of Operation
24/7 Emergency ResponseCall Anytime, Day Or NightMold, Water Damage, Fire, Storms, & Sewage Emergencies Dispatched Immediately
Scheduled AppointmentsMonday Through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:00 PMNon-Emergency Inspections, Mold Assessments, & Air Sampling Consultations
Local Response

Same-Day Mold Inspection In Farmington, CT

IICRC S520 crews dispatch across the Hartford County corridor same day in 2026, from Farmington River AE floodplain basements through Unionville mill housing and Farmington Village colonials, Devonwood post-war estate attics, Tunxis Village contemporary HVAC scopes, and UConn Health Center commercial corridor cellars.

06032ZIP / founded 1645

ZIP / founded 1645 for Farmington, Hartford County, locked silo-aware dispatch.

Colonial + Mill + Estatehousing-stock era

housing-stock era for Farmington, Hartford County, locked silo-aware dispatch.

Farmington Riverprimary drainage

primary drainage for Farmington, Hartford County, locked silo-aware dispatch.

AE Floodplainclimate exposure

climate exposure for Farmington, Hartford County, locked silo-aware dispatch.

Green Restoration branded fleet vehicles ready for service in Darien CT
About Green Restoration

About Green Restoration In Farmington, CT

Local Owner, Farmington, CT, Green Restoration

IICRC AMRT+WRT Certified

Green Restoration provides IICRC S520 certified mold inspection, containment, remediation, and lab-verified clearance testing for homes and businesses in Farmington, CT, owner-operated with IICRC AMRT and WRT certified leadership. The Farmington River AE floodplain through Unionville and the UConn Health Center corridor through Tunxis Village drive chronic capillary moisture into pre-1850 Farmington Village colonials and Unionville 1880s mill cottage cellars. Our scope sequencing prioritizes assemblies adjacent to those vectors first, because chronic capillary wicking drives most recurrence when source correction is incomplete.

Green Restoration local owner
Green RestorationLocal Owner, Farmington, CT
15+ Years Experience

As the local co-owner covering Farmington and the Hartford County corridor, I bring 15+ years of IICRC-certified restoration experience, both AMRT and WRT, and the full support of the Green Restoration network to every property. Every job is personally overseen, documented for your insurer, and stays open until lab-verified clearance confirms the work is complete.

IICRC Certified FirmLicensed & Insured In CTBBB A+ Rated Business
Local Success Stories

Trusted by Families in Farmington & Hartford County

4.9 out of 5, Rated by your neighbors on Google

We discovered mold when removing our pellet stove and called Green Restoration for help. David was very communicative and helpful throughout the entire process. He did the job thoroughly and professionally. Highly recommended!

DW

David Woolner

Mold Remediation
Verified • October 2025

I had a fantastic experience with Green Restoration. From start to finish, the team was professional, thorough, and extremely knowledgeable. David came for the initial inspection and took the time to explain the entire process.

AG

Annmarie Gieparda

Mold Remediation
Verified • March 2025

We had mold due to a water leak in our half finished basement. David and his crew did a great job, we were very satisfied. I would highly recommend Green Restoration to anyone.

T

Tanya

Water Damage
Verified • February 2025

I needed my entire condo completely cleaned after a soot blow back. Green Restoration was top shelf! So thorough and professional. Thank you so much!

JH

Jacki Hornish

Fire & Soot Cleanup
Verified • September 2025
See our latest verified reviews on:Google ReviewsFacebook
Mold Remediation Pricing

Mold Remediation Cost In Farmington, CT

2026 Farmington mold remediation: most basement and crawl claims settle $3,000 to $8,000. Per-square-foot equivalent runs $14 to $28.

Small Project, Single Area

$1,500 to $4,500

Bathroom wall, window frame, attic patch, isolated growth under 10 sq ft

Most Common

Medium Project, Basement / Crawl

$3,000 to $8,000

Basement wall, crawl-space section, single-room remediation with containment

Large Project, Whole-Home

$8,000 to $25,000+

Multi-room, Stachybotrys, structural mold, HVAC remediation, attic sheathing

Expert Answers

Farmington CT Mold Remediation FAQs

Clear 2026 answers on Farmington mold conditions, insurance coverage, and lab-verified clearance testing.

Same-day mold inspection across Farmington and the Hartford County corridor, 24/7. Our crews dispatch with thermal imaging, moisture meters, and ACAC-certified air sampling so scope is documented from the first visit, whether you are along the Farmington River AE floodplain + UConn Health Center corridor + Unionville mill watershed in Farmington Village, in a Unionville cellar, on a Tunxis Village crawl space, in a Devonwood attic, or in a UConn Health commercial property. Call (860) 222-9498 any time, day or night. Farmington Town Hall and the Farmington Village historic district perimeter both sit inside our same-day arrival radius from the Hartford County corridor team.

Mold remediation in Farmington typically ranges from $1,500 to $4,500 for single-area cleanup (a bathroom ceiling in a Farmington Village home, a window frame in a Tunxis Village ranch, a small attic patch in Devonwood), $3,000 to $8,000 for basement-wall, crawl-space, or single-room projects (where most Farmington claims settle, especially in Farmington River + Unionville mill basements and 1950s Unionville crawl spaces), and $8,000 to $25,000+ for whole-home Stachybotrys in Farmington Village cellars, multi-room containment in UConn Health commercial spaces, or HVAC remediation in larger Devonwood estates. Pricing depends on containment complexity, square footage, mold type, and whether plaster, OSB, or subfloor need replacement.

Most Connecticut homeowner policies cover mold remediation when it results from a covered water loss, such as a burst pipe in a Farmington Village colonial, a sump pump failure in a Unionville basement, an appliance leak in a Tunxis Village ranch, or a sudden roof leak in a UConn Health commercial property. Mold from long-term Farmington River + Unionville mill seepage, chronic watershed humidity, or capillary wicking typically requires a separate flood or mold endorsement. Green Restoration submits to every major carrier directly with the IICRC S520 documentation, clearance test results, and lab-analyzed spore counts adjusters require, prepared under owner our owner's AMRT credential. We are not licensed public adjusters and do not negotiate claims on your behalf.

Most Farmington mold remediation projects take 3 to 7 days from containment setup to clearance testing. Smaller jobs like a single Tunxis Village bathroom or a Unionville kitchen wall finish in 3 to 4 days. Larger projects with structural drying, whole-house HVAC remediation, or full Farmington Village cellar Stachybotrys remediation can extend to 10 days, occasionally 12 days on heavy multi-room Devonwood or UConn Health commercial scopes. Timeline depends on mold type (black mold requires additional precautions and double containment), square footage, and whether moisture source correction requires a plumber, roofer, or HVAC contractor before close-up. Farmington River corridor projects in Devonwood often need exterior drainage correction before close-up, which adds 1 to 2 days but prevents the recurrence pattern we see when source remains unaddressed in the Farmington stock.

Yes. Connecticut allows combined mold assessment and remediation, so we perform both inspection and remediation in house with ACAC-certified air sampling. Pre-remediation sampling establishes baseline at your Farmington property, post-remediation clearance testing confirms spore counts are at or below outdoor baseline, and all lab results are delivered in writing for your file and your adjuster, whether you are in a Farmington Village plaster cavity, a Unionville basement, a Devonwood attic, or a UConn Health commercial space along the Farmington River corridor. Sampling pumps run for 5 to 15 minutes per zone, results return from the independent lab in 24 to 72 hours, and the written report ties spore-count comparisons to the specific Farmington assembly we opened.

Call (860) 222-9498