Black mold removal in Rockville: what to know
Rockville's post-war subdivision housing (1950s–1970s) includes many split-level homes with partial basements and crawl spaces that combine below-grade moisture risk with inadequate original vapour barriers.
Many Rockville townhouse communities from the 1970s–1980s have common plumbing stacks — a failure in a shared stack can cause simultaneous water damage in multiple units, creating multi-unit mold remediation situations.
Mold conditions in Rockville
Common mold types in this area: Cladosporium (crawl space and partial basements); Penicillium (townhouse common-wall cavities); Stachybotrys (chronic plumbing leak cavities).
We serve Rockville Town Square, Beall-Dawson Historic House, Rockville Pike, Montgomery College Rockville and the wider Rockville area across ZIP codes 20850, 20851, 20852, 20853.
Signs you need black mold removal
- Dark green, black, or greenish-black colonies on drywall, wood, or ceiling tiles
- Mold with a slimy or wet-looking surface texture (unlike dry, powdery Cladosporium)
- Musty or damp earthy odour in a basement, bathroom, or behind walls
- Mold growth in areas with a history of prolonged water exposure or chronic leaks
- Laboratory results identifying Stachybotrys on air or surface samples
- Health symptoms improving when leaving the property and returning when inside
How we handle black mold removal in Rockville
Stachybotrys chartarum — commonly called black mold — is a dark-green to black mold species that grows on cellulose-rich materials (drywall paper, wood, ceiling tiles) that have been wet for an extended period, typically more than 48–72 hours. It is one of the species most associated with toxic mold exposure, though any mold at elevated indoor concentrations poses a health risk.
Because Stachybotrys spores are heavy and sticky, they do not disperse as readily as Cladosporium or Penicillium — which means air sampling alone may miss an active Stachybotrys colony. A licensed mold assessor will collect surface samples (tape-lift or swab) from any dark, slimy, or visually distinctive mold growth and send them to an AIHA laboratory for species confirmation.