Clearance testing in NoMa: what to know
If you live in NoMa (North of Massachusetts Avenue), you're almost certainly in new construction — most of these glass-and-steel towers were built from the mid-2000s onward on former rail-yard and industrial land. That means your mold risk looks nothing like DC's historic rowhouse core: it's HVAC condensate and building-envelope water intrusion, not old masonry.
A high-rise concentrates risk differently than a rowhouse does — a single roof membrane failure, a parking-garage waterproofing gap, or a shared mechanical-room leak can affect dozens of units through a shared wall or ceiling cavity before anyone traces it back. If you're smelling something with no obvious source in your own unit, it may not be your unit at all.
If your building sits on reclaimed industrial or rail land, which a fair amount of NoMa does, below-grade parking structures here have a documented history of groundwater intrusion that property managers keep a close eye on — worth asking about if you park or store anything below grade.
Mold conditions in NoMa
Common mold types in this area: Penicillium/Aspergillus (HVAC condensate failures in large multi-unit buildings); Cladosporium (below-grade parking structures with groundwater intrusion); Stachybotrys chartarum (undetected shared-wall leaks in high-rise construction); Chaetomium (rare in new construction, but seen where a leak has gone undetected for months).
We serve Union Station, NoMa-Gallaudet Metro, Gallaudet University, Metropolitan Branch Trail, REI Flagship Store and the wider NoMa area across ZIP codes 20002.
Signs you need clearance testing
- Remediation has been completed and containment is still in place
- The written protocol specifies clearance testing as a completion requirement
- A real estate transaction requires documented proof of successful remediation
- An insurance claim requires certified clearance documentation
- The remediator has offered to perform their own clearance (this should be declined)
- A previous clearance test failed and re-clearance is required after additional work
How we handle clearance testing in NoMa
Clearance testing is the final step of any IICRC S520-compliant mold remediation and the critical quality control measure that confirms the work was done correctly. The clearance test must be performed by an independent licensed mold assessor — the company or individual that performed the remediation cannot perform their own clearance test. This independence is mandated by the NYS 2015 Mold Law and is best practice in all markets.
The timing and conditions of clearance testing are specified in the written remediation protocol. Standard protocol requires that containment remains fully in place when samples are collected, that the HEPA-filtered negative air machine has been running for at least 4 hours before sampling, and that an outdoor control sample is collected simultaneously with indoor samples.