HVAC mold cleaning 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 HVAC mold cleaning
- Musty odour from supply vents when the HVAC system is running
- Visible mold or dark staining inside the supply or return registers
- Elevated mold spore counts in rooms that do not have visible mold on walls or ceilings
- Allergy or respiratory symptoms that worsen when the HVAC is operating
- Visible mold on the evaporator coil or in the air handler cabinet
- Drain pan that is not draining (standing water in the condensate pan)
How we handle HVAC mold cleaning in Rockville
HVAC systems can harbour and distribute mold throughout an entire building. The air handler's evaporator coil and drain pan are the most common mold sites — condensate from the cooling process creates a continuously wet surface that supports Cladosporium, Penicillium, and in neglected systems, Stachybotrys. When the system runs, mold spores are drawn off these surfaces and distributed through the duct system to every room.
Routine duct cleaning (vacuuming the inside of ductwork) is not HVAC mold remediation. Duct cleaning removes accumulated dust and debris but does not address mold on the coil, drain pan, or inside the air handler itself. HVAC mold remediation requires treating the air handler as a mold-contaminated area, using EPA-registered antifungal agents on all interior surfaces, replacing the filter, and testing air quality after treatment with the system running.