Bird control in Chinatown: what to know
Chinatown along Canal Street, Mott Street and Bayard Street has one of the highest restaurant, live-poultry and food-retail densities in the city — a combination that drives exceptionally strong rodent and cockroach pressure, with populations feeding out from the restaurant blocks into the surrounding tenement housing.
The older tenement buildings in the neighbourhood retain original plumbing systems, shared basement storage and first-floor commercial-to-residential transitions that make it difficult to seal pest entry routes without professional treatment.
Fly pressure is elevated year-round near the fish and produce markets on Canal Street, and ants are a persistent issue in ground-floor units adjacent to food retail businesses.
Signs you need bird control
- Droppings accumulating on ledges, signage, AC units, or walkways
- Pigeons roosting on the same ledges or under the same overhang
- Nests in vents, gutters, or behind signage
How we treat bird control in Chinatown
Pigeons are a New York fixture, but their droppings damage facades, signage and AC units, carry health risks and create slip hazards. Nests block vents and gutters. The goal isn't to harm the birds — it's to make the surfaces they roost on unavailable.
We install humane deterrents — bird netting, ledge spikes and exclusion — matched to the building, and remove existing nests and droppings safely. The result is a building birds simply move on from.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Chinatown and the surrounding Manhattan area — including Canal Street, Mott Street, Columbus Park, Manhattan Bridge, Bayard Street — across ZIP codes 10013.