Storm damage in South Hackensack tends to cascade: the roof fails, the water enters, and the moisture spreads floor by floor. Our crew seals the breach to keep the weather out, then traces the moisture path and dries the structure to standard. A Bergen County waterfront property faces surge risk that an inland one does not, and we plan the response accordingly. We photograph the exterior breach alongside the interior flooding so the estimate reflects both halves of the loss. Call 908-228-9765 — every hour that breach stays open deepens the loss.
- Emergency board-up + tarping
- Wind-driven rain water extraction
- Roof + envelope repair
- Tree impact damage
- Insurance documentation
- Full structural rebuild
Common NJ Storm Patterns We Handle
Tropical storms (Aug-Nov): wind damage to roofs and siding, wind-driven rain through compromised envelopes, occasional surge flooding in shore communities. Hurricane remnants tracking up the coast generate the bulk of our late-summer call volume.
Nor'easters (Oct-Apr): sustained heavy rain over multiple days creates roof leaks at flashing transitions, ice damming on cold-weather events, and wind damage similar to tropical storms. The NJ shore takes the worst of nor'easter activity but inland counties also see significant water intrusion.
Ice storms: tree impact damage from ice loading on branches, ice damming where roof eaves are inadequately insulated, and burst pipes in unheated spaces (garages, attics, crawlspaces, vacant properties). The frozen-pipe-burst calls dominate the post-ice-storm response window.
Summer thunderstorms: straight-line winds (similar damage profile to tornadoes), hail damage to roofs and siding, lightning strikes that cause electrical fires, and flash flooding when sustained rainfall exceeds storm-drain capacity in older neighborhoods.
What To Do In The First Hour After Storm Damage
The actions that matter in the first hour: secure the property if safe to do so, document the damage with photos, file the insurance claim, and call a restoration crew that can dispatch immediately. The actions that hurt the claim: signing AOB paperwork from a storm-chase contractor, throwing damaged contents away before documentation, attempting permanent repairs before the carrier has had a chance to inspect, or letting the property sit exposed because "the contractor will be here tomorrow."
For roof openings, get a tarp up if it is safe. For broken windows, board the opening to prevent further weather + animal intrusion. For interior water from a roof leak, place buckets under active drips and move what you can save away from the path of travel. Don't try to lift wet sheetrock yourself — it crumbles and makes the cleanup worse.
Photograph the loss in its current state — wide shots, close-ups, anything visible from the source of intrusion to the damaged contents. Before-photos are the foundation of the insurance scope. Without them, the adjuster has no basis to evaluate what was there before the loss.
Beyond a single service line
A property loss in South Hackensack rarely stays in one lane — storm damage restoration often overlaps with water removal, smoke odor removal, mold remediation, sewage backup recovery, post-loss reconstruction, and our crew handles all of it under one contract. We dispatch the same standard to Storm Damage Restoration in Hackensack, Teaneck storm damage restoration, Storm Damage Restoration in Englewood, Storm Damage Restoration in Fort Lee and everywhere else across Bergen County.
If you searched for a restoration crew near you, you have reached a local team — call 908-228-9765 any hour. For background, read Frozen Pipes in Bergen County: What Breaks, What Happens Next, and How to Limit the Damage on our blog, or head back to our South Hackensack home page to see everything we do.