Facade cleaning and restoration for hotels
For hotel owners and operators, where the exterior sets the guest's expectation before check in and the work cannot intrude on a single stay.
A hotel sells an experience, and the building is the first page of it. A guest forms a view of the whole stay from the approach and the entrance, so a stained facade or a tired canopy costs more than its repair, it costs the rate the room can command and the review that follows. The work also has to be invisible to guests, who are present around the clock. Your hotel gets vetted, IRATA certified specialists who work occupied hospitality buildings discreetly, with the access and the fixed price agreed before anyone is on the ropes.
The facade is the first impression a guest pays for
Hospitality runs on first impressions, and the building delivers the first one. The approach, the entrance and the frontage set the guest's expectation of the room rate before they reach reception. A clean, maintained exterior supports the rate and the rating, while a neglected one undercuts both quietly. So a hotel facade is maintained as part of the guest proposition, not as deferred upkeep, and usually on a planned cycle that keeps it consistently presentable rather than letting it slip and recover.
Working around guests who never leave
Unlike an office, a hotel is occupied every hour of every day. There is no closed evening or empty weekend to work into. The specialist has to plan drops and access around arrivals, check out, the entrance and the rooms with guests behind the windows, working quietly and cleanly so the work does not appear in a review. Discretion is part of the brief, not a bonus, and the access plan is built around the guest experience rather than the building alone.
Cleaning, restoration and the look that has to hold
Hotel exteriors range from modern glass and render to ornate heritage stone on grand older buildings, so the work spans routine cleaning through to genuine restoration. On heritage hotels the wrong cleaning method can damage the stone and breach any listing conditions, so gentle, consented methods matter. DOFF steam and TORC gentle vortex are used on stone and masonry where appropriate, and soft washing on render and coated surfaces, with the method chosen to protect the surface and the look the brand depends on.
How it works for a hotel
You tell us the hotel, the elevations and what needs doing once. We do it with vetted, IRATA certified specialists who work occupied hospitality buildings and who carry the right insurance, checked before any work starts. You get a fixed price, a discreet access plan built around guests, and on heritage buildings the conservation aware methods the fabric and any listing require.
Common questions
Will guests be disturbed?
No, that is the brief. Hotels are occupied around the clock, so the access plan is built around arrivals, check out and the entrance, with the work done quietly and cleanly so it does not intrude on a stay.
Our hotel is a listed building. Can you still clean it?
Yes, with conservation aware methods. Gentle, consented cleaning suited to heritage stone is used so the surface is not damaged and any listing conditions are respected. The method is agreed before work starts.
How quickly can someone look at it?
A surveyor or specialist who covers your area typically comes back within 48 hours of your enquiry, with a fixed price to follow after the survey.
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.