A house fire in Dover leaves behind two concurrent crises: what the flames burned and what the hoses soaked. Cascade Flood Repair addresses both in a single coordinated scope, boarding and tarping the breach first, then drying the water-saturated framing before we move into soot encapsulation and smoke-odor treatment room by room. Smoke migrates through Morris County construction types in ways that are predictable once you know where to look — through balloon-frame stud cavities in pre-war stock, through HVAC chases in mid-century ranches, into closets and crawlspaces well beyond the charred area. We test and treat the full migration path, not just the visible burn zone, and we document every step. One crew, one timeline, one claim file, one point of contact at 908-228-9715.
- Soot + smoke odor removal
- HVAC decontamination
- Pack-out + content cleaning
- Hydroxyl odor treatment
- Structural rebuild
- Insurance-scope documentation
HVAC Decontamination — The Step Most Restorers Skip
If smoke entered the HVAC system, the system needs to be cleaned per NADCA (National Air Duct Cleaners Association) standards before re-occupancy. Soot inside ductwork acts as an odor reservoir — every time the HVAC runs, it pushes that residue back into the living space. Owners report "the smoke smell came back" weeks after restoration. The reason is almost always that the ducts were not properly cleaned.
Our HVAC scope: source removal (HEPA vacuuming of supply + return ducts), antimicrobial treatment, replacement of any porous duct insulation that was contaminated, and replacement of the air handler filter + any disposable components. We document with before/after photos at multiple inspection points so the carrier sees the work was actually completed and not just billed.
For homes with old ductwork that was already in marginal condition before the fire, we will tell you honestly when replacement makes more sense than cleaning. The decision drives a different scope, different timeline, different insurance discussion — better to know on day one than discover after a partial cleaning that the system needs replacement anyway.
How Fire + Smoke Damage Actually Spreads Through A Property
The fire department's job is to put the fire out. They do it well. What they leave behind is the start of the restoration job — and the damage that determines the eventual claim size has very little to do with the visible burn area.
Soot is acidic and moves on air currents. While the fire was burning, the HVAC system likely circulated soot-laden air through every room of the structure. Soot settled on horizontal surfaces, infiltrated upholstery and carpet fibers, and coated the inside of ductwork. Heat caused volatile organic compounds in plastics, fabrics, and finishes to off-gas, and those compounds redeposited on cooler surfaces as a sticky odor-bearing residue that does not wash off.
Our scope addresses each: HEPA vacuuming of horizontal surfaces, dry-chem sponge cleaning of walls and ceilings, HVAC duct cleaning per NADCA standards, content pack-out for items that need shop-cleaning, and hydroxyl or ozone treatment for porous materials in the affected envelope. None of this is optional — skipping any phase leaves residual odor that returns within weeks.
Fire Damage Restoration and the rest of your recovery
A property loss in Dover rarely stays in one lane — fire damage restoration often overlaps with basement flood cleanup, emergency board-up, mold removal, sewage backup recovery, post-loss reconstruction, and our crew handles all of it under one contract. We dispatch the same standard to Rockaway fire damage restoration, Fire Damage Restoration in Morristown, Parsippany fire damage restoration, Denville fire damage restoration and everywhere else across Morris County.
If you searched for a restoration crew near you, you have reached a local team — call 908-228-9715 any hour. For background, read Mold in a Dover Home: Where It Hides, Why Morris County Conditions Accelerate It, and What Real Remediation Looks Like on our blog, or head back to our Dover home page to see everything we do.