A fire is a traumatic event that violates the safety of your home. Even after the fire trucks leave, the damage continues. Acidic soot residues settle on surfaces, causing pitting and corrosion within hours. We are your Saline, MI fire recovery specialists. From emergency board-up service after fire to the final deodorization, we walk with you through the entire recovery process.
Call 24/7: Get an Immediate Crew On-Site
Fire damage is complex. You have the charring from the flames, the water damage from the hoses, and the pervasive smoke damage. We specialize in smoke damage cleaning and soot removal from walls and ceilings. Different types of fires (protein, wood, plastic) create different types of smoke webs. We match the cleaning chemical to the type of soot to prevent smearing and permanent staining.
Masking the smell with air fresheners doesn't work. The smoke odor particles are embedded in the pores of your wood and drywall. We use ozone treatment for smoke odor and thermal fogging to penetrate these materials. This process breaks down the odor-causing molecules, ensuring that "smokey smell" doesn't return on hot, humid days months later.
Call 24/7: Get an Immediate Crew On-Site
We offer fire damaged content cleaning and pack out. We carefully inventory, wrap, and transport your salvageable belongings to our facility for ultrasonic cleaning and ozone treatment. Meanwhile, on-site, we perform fire damage roof tarp services to protect your open home from the elements while the interior restoration begins.
The fire is over; let the healing begin. We treat your home and your memories with the utmost care, working tirelessly to erase the signs of the fire.
Call for 24/7 Board-Up & Restoration: (833) 541-0100
"The kitchen fire was small, but the smoke ruined the whole downstairs. DCUC cleaned the walls, the carpets, and the ducts. It smells like a new house."
"They arrived while the fire department was still rolling up hoses to board up our windows. That peace of mind was priceless."
"Incredible attention to detail. They cleaned soot off my collection of porcelain figurines without breaking a single one."
Before the 18th century, Native Americans traveled to what is now Saline to hunt wildlife and gather salt from the salt springs they found nearby. In the 18th century, French explorers canoed up to the area and also harvested the salt. They named the local river Saline ("salty"). Europeans settled the area in the 19th century, most of them from England and Germany. Together with Orange Risdon, a government surveyor generally considered the city's founder, the residents named the town Saline, which was officially established in 1832. In 1870 railroad service, provided by the Detroit-Hillsdale-&-Indiana Railroad, first reached Saline. In 1875 Salinians built one of the city's most famous landmarks, the Second-Empire frame, 2 + 1⁄2-story residential building, the Davenport House, a.k.a. Curtis Mansion. The town continued to grow, and in 1931 the Village of Saline became the City of Saline. The Saline Fisheries Research Station was built on the site of a pioneer grist mill. Saline has had its own newspaper since ca. 1874 but the Saline Reporter was shuttered by its owner, Digital First Media, in 2014. The Saline Post, an independent outlet, now serves the community.
Zip Codes in Saline, MI that we also serve: 48176