Facade cleaning for healthcare buildings
For estates and facilities teams in hospitals, clinics and care settings, where the building runs every hour and the work has to respect patients, infection control and clinical operations.
A healthcare building never closes and never has a low stakes day. The facade still has to be maintained, because a clean, cared for exterior matters to patients, visitors and CQC alike, but the work happens around live clinical operations, vulnerable people, and infection control that governs far more than the inside. Access routes for ambulances and patients cannot be blocked, noise has to be managed around wards, and the specialist has to be the kind who works hospital sites, not just buildings. Your site gets vetted specialists who clean healthcare estates around clinical operation.
A building that cannot pause and cannot fail
Healthcare estates run continuously and carry a duty of care that ordinary buildings do not. The facade is maintained because the environment matters to patient confidence and to inspection, but the work is the least disruptive part of the day by necessity. Emergency and patient access routes stay clear, plant and ventilation intakes are respected, and the work is planned around the clinical day rather than imposed on it. There is no version of a healthcare job where the building flexes around the contractor.
Infection control reaches the outside too
Infection prevention governs more than the clinical interior. Water use, run off, chemical selection and the control of dust and aerosols around ventilation intakes and windows all matter when the people inside are vulnerable. The specialist has to choose methods and containment that respect infection control, coordinate with the estates team on which intakes and openings to protect, and work in a way that does not introduce risk to the environment they are cleaning. This is a coordination job as much as a cleaning one.
Wards, windows and working quietly
Behind the windows are patients, some of them seriously unwell, so noise, working hours and visible activity all have to be managed around wards and clinical areas. The specialist plans drops and access with the estates team to avoid sensitive areas at sensitive times, working quietly and keeping the visible disruption to a minimum. The brief is to maintain the building without ever becoming part of a patient's experience of it.
How it works for a healthcare site
You tell us the site, the buildings and what needs doing once. We do it with vetted, insured specialists who work healthcare estates around clinical operation and infection control, checked before any work starts. You get a fixed price and a plan coordinated with your estates team, so the facade is maintained around patients, access routes and infection control rather than across them.
Common questions
Can you work around a live hospital?
Yes. Healthcare sites are worked around the clinical day, keeping emergency and patient access clear and planning drops with the estates team to avoid sensitive areas at sensitive times.
Does infection control affect the cleaning?
Yes. Water use, run off, chemical choice and the control of dust and aerosols around ventilation intakes and windows are all planned with the estates team so the work respects infection prevention.
Will it disturb patients?
The brief is that it should not. Noise, hours and visible activity are managed around wards and clinical areas, with the work kept quiet and low profile.
Tell us about the building
Answer a few quick questions, add a photo of the elevation if you have one, and a specialist who covers your area comes back with a fixed price, usually within one working day.
Get your fixed quote
A few quick steps. Building, height, location, a photo if you have one, then where to send it.