24/7 PROPERTY RESPONSE · Southwest Atlanta (678) 831-6665
RESTORATION SERVICE

Structural Drying & Dehumidification

Measured drying for wet framing, drywall, flooring systems, insulation, and concealed assemblies after water is removed.

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Measured drying for wet framing, drywall, flooring systems, insulation, and concealed assemblies after water is removed.

A room can look dry while moisture remains inside assemblies. Structural drying uses air movement, dehumidification, temperature, material readings, and repeat monitoring to move a building toward a defensible dry standard.

What property owners should do first

Protect people before protecting materials. Stay out of areas with electrical hazards, sagging ceilings, contaminated water, unstable finishes, or active structural damage. If the source can be stopped safely, isolate it. Photograph the affected rooms and the suspected source before moving or discarding materials unless they create an immediate hazard.

When this service is usually needed

  • Wet drywall or insulation after extraction
  • Hardwood or subfloor moisture
  • Finished basement losses
  • Multi-room plumbing leaks
  • Commercial wall and ceiling assemblies
  • Slow roof leaks with concealed moisture

How First Choice approaches the loss

  1. Establish initial material readings
  2. Identify airflow and dehumidification needs
  3. Position equipment around the actual wet area
  4. Control unaffected zones when needed
  5. Record readings and adjust the drying plan
  6. Verify progress before equipment removal or repairs

Materials and building areas that may be involved

Water and humidity can affect more than the room where the loss began. Commonly evaluated areas include drywall, insulation, baseboards, cabinets, subflooring, hardwood, carpet cushion, ceilings, framing, crawl spaces, attics, mechanical chases, adjacent rooms, and the level below. Commercial buildings may add suspended ceilings, shared walls, tenant spaces, elevators, fire-rated assemblies, equipment rooms, and operational areas.

What changes the scope

The final plan depends on the source, water category or contamination concerns, affected materials, how long the condition has been active, building type, occupancy, contents, access, insurance documentation, and the repairs required after mitigation. A useful assessment separates immediate stabilization from the drying, cleaning, removal, and repair work that follows.

  • Whether the source is still active or has been repaired
  • How far moisture moved beneath or behind visible finishes
  • Whether materials can be dried in place or require removal
  • Whether occupants, tenants, inventory, or equipment must remain protected
  • What readings, photographs, logs, estimates, and approvals are required
  • Whether additional trades or permanent repairs are part of the next phase

Residential and commercial response

Homeowners often need clear answers about living areas, children, pets, contents, insurance, equipment, demolition, and how long rooms may be disrupted. Commercial and multifamily projects may also require work zones, tenant notices, after-hours access, security, ownership approval, consultants, daily reporting, and a phased reopening plan.

Documentation and insurance communication

Project documentation can include source information, photographs, moisture readings, equipment records, affected-material notes, estimates, daily updates, change conditions, invoices, and completion records. First Choice documents observed conditions and completed work; the insurance carrier determines coverage under the policy.

Connected services and next steps

Water losses often connect to structural drying, moisture assessment, or mold remediation. Commercial properties can review our commercial water damage response. Property owners can also review insurance and documentation guidance before requesting service.

Frequently asked questions

What determines the scope of structural drying & dehumidification?

The scope depends on the source, affected materials, how far moisture or contamination traveled, how long conditions have been active, the property type, occupancy, contents, access, documentation needs, and repair responsibilities.

Should I call First Choice or my insurance company first?

You can contact either one first. Active water and safety concerns should be addressed promptly, and the loss should be documented before permanent repairs begin. Your carrier determines coverage under the policy.

Can damage extend beyond the visible area?

Yes. Water can move beneath flooring, behind cabinets, through wall and ceiling cavities, into insulation, and between rooms or floors.

Do you work on commercial and multifamily properties?

Yes. Commercial response can be organized around tenants, access, business continuity, ownership, consultants, documentation, and phased reopening.

Service areas

First Choice serves Southwest and South Metro Atlanta communities from its Union City home base.

When water is moving, the next call matters.

Tell First Choice what happened.

Share the property location, source of damage, affected rooms or building areas, and any immediate hazards.