24/7 Fire & Smoke Damage Restoration in Santa Clara, CA
After a fire, soot, smoke odor, and firefighting water keep doing damage. Our FSRT-certified crew secures and restores Santa Clara properties — on-site in about 45 minutes.
Fire restoration for Santa Clara's homes and businesses
Fire damage in Santa Clara spans the historic Old Quad's wood-framed early-1900s homes — where older materials and tight lot lines raise the stakes — to the commercial and multi-unit buildings near Santa Clara University and Levi's Stadium. In every case the problem is layered: charred structure, corrosive soot, penetrating odor, and water left behind by the fire department. We address all of it as one coordinated restoration so nothing keeps degrading after we leave.
What we handle after a fire
Soot and smoke residue removal from surfaces, contents, and HVAC.
Smoke odor elimination at the source (not masking).
Firefighting-water removal and drying (our WRT/ASD training).
Board-up and securing of damaged structures.
Wildfire smoke cleanup when smoke reaches homes from distant fires.
Certified, coordinated, local
Our team is IICRC-certified in Fire & Smoke (FSRT) plus water (WRT/ASD), on-site in 45 minutes, available 24/7, and we work directly with your insurer. See our full fire & smoke restoration process or all Santa Clara services.
FAQs
Is it safe to re-enter my Santa Clara home after a fire?
Wait for fire-department clearance — soot is hazardous and the structure may be unstable. We assess first.
Can you remove smoke odor from an older Old Quad home?
Yes — proper deodorization treats the source even in older, porous materials.
How fast can you respond?
About 45 minutes, 24/7.
Related guides
Santa Clara restoration resources
Guides that support fire & smoke damage restoration decisions for Santa Clara property owners.
The aftermath of a house fire is overwhelming and disorienting. Knowing the right steps — in the right order — helps you stay safe, protect your family, and set up the recovery to go as smoothly as possible. Here's what to do. (General guidance; always follow instructions from fire officials.)