From the Pennsylvania state capital corridor of Harrisburg, Lemoyne, Camp Hill, Mechanicsburg, and Enola through Cumberland County's Carlisle, Boiling Springs, Newville, Shippensburg, and Duncannon, south into Adams County's Gettysburg, Biglerville, Littlestown, New Oxford, and the surrounding borough communities, west through Franklin County's Chambersburg, Waynesboro, Greencastle, and Mercersburg, and across the Mason-Dixon Line into Maryland's Washington County communities of Hagerstown, Sharpsburg, Boonsboro, Keedysville, Smithsburg, and Williamsport, Frederick County's Frederick, Emmitsburg, Thurmont, and Walkersville, and Carroll County's Westminster, Taneytown, and Union Bridge, our IICRC-certified technicians serve one of the most historically significant and geographically diverse restoration territories in the Mid-Atlantic.
Whether you're dealing with Susquehanna River or Conodoguinet Creek flooding, tropical storm remnant flooding across the South Mountain divide, burst pipes from an Appalachian winter freeze, mold in an older Adams County farmhouse, or fire damage anywhere across the two-state territory, we arrive within 45 minutes. We serve homeowners, businesses, and property managers throughout south-central Pennsylvania and western Maryland, 24 hours a day, every day of the year.
Susquehanna River and Conodoguinet Creek flooding through the Harrisburg and Carlisle corridors, Antietam Creek flooding in Washington County MD, tropical storm remnant flooding across the territory, nor'easter basement flooding, and plumbing failures throughout the two-state residential inventory. 24/7 response.
Learn more →Complete fire and smoke damage restoration across south-central PA and western MD -- from older housing stock in Harrisburg, Carlisle, and Chambersburg through the historic district properties of Gettysburg and Sharpsburg to newer residential and commercial construction throughout the growing suburbs of both states.
Learn more →The Mid-Atlantic's humid summers and the territory's large inventory of older homes -- from Harrisburg-area row houses to rural Adams County farmhouses to Hagerstown's established neighborhoods -- create persistent mold risk after any water intrusion event. Certified remediation throughout both states.
Learn more →Emergency sewage cleanup for older municipal infrastructure neighborhoods in Harrisburg, Carlisle, Chambersburg, Hagerstown, and Frederick, and the private septic systems serving the rural communities throughout both states -- biohazard-standard 24/7 response across the full territory.
Learn more →Rapid restoration for PA state government facilities in Harrisburg, the U.S. Army War College in Carlisle, the Gettysburg National Military Park tourism economy, Meritus Medical Center in Hagerstown, Frederick Health Hospital, and businesses throughout the two-state territory.
Learn more →From Susquehanna River flood rebuilds and tropical storm structural repairs through fire damage reconstruction in historic Gettysburg and Chambersburg properties -- one local company serving both Pennsylvania and Maryland, no subcontractors.
Learn more →Certified biohazard and crime scene cleanup serving Pennsylvania State Police, Maryland State Police, Cumberland and Adams County Sheriffs, Washington and Frederick County Sheriffs, and families throughout the two-state territory with full PA DEP and MD MDE compliance.
Learn more →EPA-approved disinfection for south-central PA and western MD homes, PA state government facilities, Gettysburg and Antietam area tourism properties, healthcare campuses, and commercial properties throughout the full territory.
Learn more →Immediate response to tropical storm remnants, nor'easters, Susquehanna and Antietam Creek flooding, Appalachian winter storms, and the severe thunderstorms that move through the South Mountain divide throughout spring and summer -- 24/7 across both states.
Learn more →Water damage across this two-state territory is shaped by the Mid-Atlantic's position in the path of Atlantic weather systems and by the complex river and creek watershed network that drains the Appalachian terrain between Harrisburg and the Maryland Piedmont. The Susquehanna River -- which defines the eastern edge of the territory and runs directly through the Harrisburg corridor from Duncannon and Marysville south through Harrisburg and Middletown -- is one of the largest and most flood-prone rivers on the East Coast during major storm events. Tropical Storm Lee in September 2011 produced the defining recent flood event for this territory: Lee's exceptional rainfall across the Susquehanna watershed sent the river to near-record levels at Harrisburg and pushed the Conodoguinet Creek -- which flows east through Newville, Carlisle, and the communities north and west of Camp Hill before joining the Susquehanna -- into neighborhoods and properties throughout the corridor. The Conodoguinet Valley communities have flooded multiple times during significant storm events, and the riverfront and creek-adjacent properties throughout the Harrisburg and Carlisle areas face recurring flood risk with every major Atlantic system that tracks through the central Appalachians.
In Maryland, the Antietam Creek -- which drains Washington County from the South Mountain westward through Keedysville, Sharpsburg, and Boonsboro before joining the Potomac at Antietam Creek Station -- carries significant flooding risk during major precipitation events. The Conococheague Creek, which flows south through Chambersburg, Greencastle, and Hagerstown before reaching the Potomac at Williamsport, drains a broad Franklin County and Washington County watershed that concentrates rapidly during intense rainfall. Both creek systems have flooded their adjacent communities during major storm events, and the properties throughout these corridors face recurring flood risk. Away from the river and creek corridors, the dominant water damage event across the territory is the same as the rest of the Mid-Atlantic: basement flooding from nor'easters and tropical storm remnants, burst pipes during winter freeze events, and the plumbing failures that accumulate in the region's substantial inventory of older housing stock. Our team responds 24/7 to all water damage events throughout both states.
Fire damage across the two-state territory reflects the architectural diversity of a region whose communities span from the Civil War-era brick and stone construction of Gettysburg, Chambersburg, and Sharpsburg through the working-class row house neighborhoods of Harrisburg and Hagerstown, the agricultural and rural residential construction throughout Adams County, Franklin County, and western Maryland, and the newer suburban development that has grown throughout the Camp Hill, Mechanicsburg, and Frederick corridors over the past several decades. The historic communities carry fire risks specific to their era of construction -- Chambersburg, which holds the distinction of being the only northern city burned during the Civil War (Confederate forces torched much of the downtown in July 1864), has rebuilt and expanded over more than a century and a half, and the older sections of town carry the structural and material characteristics of 19th and early 20th century construction. Gettysburg's historic district and the preserved structures throughout Adams County present restoration challenges that require experience with the building materials and techniques of the Civil War era and earlier.
A fire in any of these historic or older properties leaves behind damage that requires both technical expertise and careful attention to the historic fabric of the building -- smoke penetrates deeply into the plaster, original woodwork, and stone or brick construction of older properties in ways that modern construction does not experience. 911 Restoration of South Central PA / Western MD provides full-service fire damage restoration throughout the two-state territory -- from emergency board-up through complete structural rebuilds -- working with your insurance company and, where applicable, with historic preservation guidelines throughout the process.
Mold is a persistent challenge throughout the two-state territory, driven by the Mid-Atlantic's humid continental climate and the region's large inventory of older housing with basements, crawl spaces, and original foundation waterproofing systems that were not designed to the moisture management standards of modern construction. The Mid-Atlantic's summer humidity -- when outdoor relative humidity regularly exceeds 70 percent from June through September and temperatures sustain elevated dew points that drive moisture into building assemblies -- creates baseline mold growth conditions in any property with moisture vulnerabilities that exist for an extended portion of the year. Basements throughout the Harrisburg corridor, the Adams County farmhouse and residential inventory, the older neighborhoods of Chambersburg, Hagerstown, and Frederick, and the rural communities throughout both states carry these vulnerabilities in abundance.
The territory's recurring flood history creates a specific and ongoing mold risk that is separate from the climate baseline. Properties throughout the Conodoguinet and Susquehanna corridors that experienced flooding during Tropical Storm Lee in 2011 or any of the subsequent significant storm events -- and were dried with consumer equipment rather than professional moisture assessment to verified content targets -- may carry active mold in lower-level wall assemblies, floor systems, and structural framing that was never fully remediated. In the Mid-Atlantic's humid summers, mold that establishes in these concealed spaces after a flood event does not dry out between seasons -- it continues growing year-round. Our certified mold remediation specialists identify and correct the moisture source and verify complete remediation throughout both states.
Raw sewage is a Category 3 biohazard containing bacteria, viruses, and parasites that pose serious health risks to everyone in the affected property. Sewage backup throughout the two-state territory occurs most commonly during heavy nor'easter and tropical storm rainfall events when the combined sewer infrastructure of the territory's older established communities -- Harrisburg, Carlisle, Chambersburg, Hagerstown, and the established neighborhoods throughout both states -- is overwhelmed by stormwater infiltration and forces sewage backward through basement floor drains and lower-level plumbing. The same major storm events that produce flooding along the creek and river corridors also produce sewer system surcharge in the connected urban and suburban communities, creating a dual contamination risk for properties in and near the flood zones.
Throughout the rural communities of Adams County, Franklin County, and the western Maryland counties -- where private septic systems serve the vast majority of residential and rural commercial properties -- sewage emergencies occur when prolonged wet periods saturate soils and prevent drain field function, or when aging septic system components fail. Our team responds 24/7 to sewage emergencies throughout all communities in both states.
The two-state territory encompasses an economically diverse commercial landscape anchored by government, healthcare, education, defense, agriculture, and a nationally significant Civil War heritage tourism economy. The Pennsylvania State Capitol complex in Harrisburg -- one of the most architecturally significant state capitol buildings in the country -- anchors a state government and professional services sector that employs tens of thousands throughout the Harrisburg metro. The U.S. Army War College at Carlisle Barracks is one of the most prestigious military educational institutions in the world, and the broader defense and federal contractor presence throughout the territory generates significant commercial real estate demand. Dickinson College and Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania, along with Hood College and McDaniel College in Maryland, add academic institutional demand throughout the territory.
The Gettysburg National Military Park draws over one million visitors annually, and the tourism economy of Gettysburg -- the hotels, restaurants, retail operations, and battlefield-adjacent commercial properties -- makes any property emergency during peak visitation season an urgent operational matter. The Antietam National Battlefield in Sharpsburg, Maryland adds a second major heritage tourism anchor to the territory's commercial economy. Meritus Medical Center in Hagerstown, Frederick Health Hospital in Frederick, UPMC Carlisle, and Holy Spirit Medical Center in Camp Hill represent the territory's significant healthcare institutional presence, requiring restoration documentation and compliance standards that meet institutional requirements. 911 Restoration of South Central PA / Western MD provides rapid commercial restoration throughout both states, 24 hours a day.
When damage goes beyond surface-level cleanup, full reconstruction is the path forward. 911 Restoration of South Central PA / Western MD manages the entire process from initial damage assessment through final finishing work for homes and businesses throughout both states. We handle all damage types -- from Susquehanna River and Conodoguinet Creek flood rebuilds in the Harrisburg and Carlisle corridors to Antietam Creek and Conococheague Creek flood restoration in Maryland, nor'easter structural repairs throughout both states, fire damage reconstruction in historic Gettysburg and Chambersburg properties, and mold damage remediation requiring structural framing replacement across the full territory.
The two-state territory's building diversity demands reconstruction expertise that spans the full range: the Civil War-era brick, stone, and frame construction of Gettysburg, Chambersburg, and Sharpsburg; the working-class row house and early 20th century residential stock of Harrisburg and Hagerstown; the mid-century suburban construction throughout the Mechanicsburg, Westminster, and Frederick corridors; the newer residential and commercial development throughout the growing communities; and the agricultural and rural construction common throughout Adams, Franklin, and the western Maryland counties. We work within both Pennsylvania and Maryland building codes across the full territory.
911 Restoration of South Central PA / Western MD provides certified biohazard and crime scene cleanup throughout south-central Pennsylvania and western Maryland -- serving Pennsylvania State Police, Maryland State Police, Cumberland County Sheriff, Adams County Sheriff, Franklin County Sheriff, Washington County Sheriff, Frederick County Sheriff, Carroll County Sheriff, and all law enforcement agencies, property management companies, and families throughout the two-state territory. Every job is handled with complete discretion, genuine compassion, and strict compliance with Pennsylvania DEP and Maryland MDE regulations governing biohazardous waste handling and disposal across both states.
Professional sanitization services for homes, businesses, and commercial properties throughout south-central Pennsylvania and western Maryland. The Pennsylvania state government complex in Harrisburg, the U.S. Army War College at Carlisle, Meritus Medical Center, Frederick Health Hospital, UPMC Carlisle, and Holy Spirit Medical Center create consistent institutional demand for hospital-grade disinfection at a documented, verifiable standard. The Gettysburg and Antietam tourism economies -- with their high-volume hotel, restaurant, and visitor facility operations serving peak seasonal traffic -- generate commercial sanitization demand from operators maintaining professional standards for high-turnover guest contact environments. Properties throughout the territory that experienced flooding or sewage backup require professional disinfection to verify that biohazard contamination has been properly addressed before reoccupancy.
The two-state territory sits squarely in the path of the Mid-Atlantic's most significant storm systems, and its position in the Appalachian corridor between the coastal plain and the interior creates specific storm damage patterns that residents of the region know well. Tropical storms and hurricane remnants that make landfall on the Carolinas or Mid-Atlantic coast and track northwestward over the Appalachians carry their rainfall into the Susquehanna, Conodoguinet, Antietam, and Conococheague watersheds simultaneously, producing the multi-day flooding events that have defined the territory's worst disaster scenarios. Tropical Storm Lee in September 2011 produced a precipitation event over the Susquehanna watershed that sent the river to near-record levels at Harrisburg, flooded communities along the Conodoguinet from Newville through Carlisle, and produced water damage throughout the territory that took months to fully address. Prior to Lee, Tropical Storm Ivan in 2004 and Hurricane Agnes in 1972 had produced similarly significant flooding events in the same corridors, demonstrating the recurring nature of this risk.
Nor'easters -- the powerful coastal storms that track up the Atlantic seaboard from fall through spring -- deliver the territory's heaviest snowfall and ice events, and their combination of high winds, coastal moisture, and Appalachian terrain interactions produce ice storms that damage rooflines, bring down trees, and freeze pipes throughout the territory during prolonged cold periods. Summer thunderstorms crossing the South Mountain divide can produce intense localized rainfall and flash flooding in communities throughout the Greencastle, Waynesboro, and Chambersburg area. Our team responds 24/7 to all storm events throughout both states.
We answer your call any time for properties throughout south-central Pennsylvania -- including Harrisburg, Carlisle, Mechanicsburg, Camp Hill, Gettysburg, Chambersburg, Waynesboro, Hanover, Shippensburg, and all surrounding communities -- and throughout western Maryland -- including Hagerstown, Frederick, Westminster, Taneytown, Emmitsburg, and Boonsboro. Nights, weekends, holidays, and during active storm events.
Fast arrival limits water spread in the territory's diverse housing stock and reduces total restoration scope and cost. Every hour of delay after a Conodoguinet Creek flood event or a nor'easter basement flood in an older Adams County or Washington County home increases moisture penetration into building materials that absorb and retain water -- and in the Mid-Atlantic's humid summers, that moisture becomes mold risk within 24 to 48 hours.
We carry contractor licenses, insurance, and regulatory compliance in both Pennsylvania and Maryland -- handling the full restoration process under both states' building codes, permit requirements, and environmental regulations without requiring property owners to coordinate across state lines.
Our team understands the specific challenges of the two-state territory -- Susquehanna and creek corridor flooding dynamics, the mold legacy of tropical storm flood events, Mid-Atlantic nor'easter and ice storm patterns, the historic building stock of Gettysburg and Chambersburg, and the full range of residential and commercial construction across both states.
We work directly with your insurance company and handle documentation and billing on your behalf, simplifying the claims process for homeowners and businesses throughout both Pennsylvania and Maryland.
One local team handles everything from emergency cleanup through complete reconstruction throughout both states. No handoffs, no gaps in accountability, no subcontractor delays -- from the first call through project completion.
Don't wait. Water damage, mold, and storm damage cause more destruction every hour. We hope you never need us, but when you do, we're ready.
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