Rodent control in SoHo: what to know
SoHo's iconic cast-iron loft buildings along Greene, Mercer and Wooster Streets were originally factories — converted to mixed residential/retail use, they retain deep service basements, loading docks and original plumbing where rodents and cockroaches find ideal harbourage.
The neighbourhood's ground-floor retail and restaurant density along Broadway, Spring and Prince Streets generates food waste pressure that is channelled into the surrounding building basements and shared service corridors.
High-value rental lofts with frequent short-term and corporate tenancy make bed bug monitoring important; fly pressure is elevated around the restaurant back-of-house operations on side streets.
Signs you need rodent control
- Droppings along walls, under sinks, or in cabinets and drawers
- Gnaw marks on food packaging, wiring, or baseboards
- Scratching or scurrying noises in walls or ceilings, especially at night
- A persistent musky, ammonia-like odour
- Greasy rub marks along baseboards and runways
How we treat rodent control in SoHo
New York City has one of the densest rodent populations in the world. Aging infrastructure, restaurant-heavy blocks and continuous construction give rats and mice food, shelter and highways between buildings. Killing the rodents you can see is only half the job — without sealing how they get in, the next wave moves in within weeks.
Our rodent programme is built around exclusion: we inspect the building envelope for gaps around pipes, vents, foundation cracks, door sweeps and utility penetrations — rats can squeeze through a hole the size of a quarter, mice through a dime. We seal those entry points, then knock down the active population with a combination of trapping and tamper-resistant baiting placed away from people and pets.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of SoHo and the surrounding Manhattan area — including Broadway, Prince Street, Houston Street, Greene Street cast-iron buildings, Spring Street — across ZIP codes 10012, 10013.