Window cleaning in Gloucester.
We work Gloucester's historic downtown, the Route 17 corridor, and the river-facing neighborhoods out toward Ware Point. Same crew every visit — they know which Hickory Fork lane has the oak canopy that drops sap in July and which Main Street house still has the original 1800s double-hung sashes.
Why Gloucester
- We know the historic districts The 18th- and 19th-century homes around Courthouse Green need different handling than the tract builds off Belroi Road. We detail wood sashes without popping glazing points, and we never pressure-wash historic brick.
- We work the whole county From the Ware Neck waterfront to the Clay Bank fields to the Ordinary crossroads, we run the same two-person crew. No rotating subs, no unfamiliar faces at your door.
- We plan around the tree canopy The old oaks lining Main Street and Hickory Fork mean scheduled cleanings before and after peak pollen, not a rigid calendar. You pay for clean glass, not for fighting yellow film.
- Pollen and humidity set the spring schedule The pine carpet drops in early April and Gloucester hits 70°F dewpoints by mid-May. That's a narrow window where dust-sensitive exterior work has to happen BEFORE the pollen, then the humidity. We pace the calendar against actual weather, not just date.
- Waterfront homes live in salt air York River frontage and Guinea Creek are harder on paint, caulk, and exterior metal than inland blocks. Protocols differ for coastal homes — marine-grade sealants, thorough rinsing to clear salt creep, and timing that avoids direct sun on wet surfaces.
- Tropical storm season is part of the calendar August through October we route follow-up cleanup after named storms. If you're on the coast or under mature oaks, post-landfall debris + gutter work is usually bookable same-week; call as soon as a forecast sharpens.
If you're inside Gloucester County lines, we service it. If we can't — unsafe access, wrong season, beyond our crew's reach — we tell you before we quote.
Where we've worked.
Courthouse & Main Street
- · Main Street Historic District
- · Courthouse Green
- · Stagecoach Road
- · Belroi Road corridor
West of Route 17
- · Clay Bank
- · Hickory Fork
- · Zanoni
- · Bena
Ware Neck
- · Ware Neck Road
- · Warner Hall area
- · Ware Point
Ordinary & south
- · Ordinary
- · Route 17 south corridor
Did you know? Gloucester
-
Geography
Gloucester County, Virginia is a peninsula located between the York River to the south and the Piankatank River to the north, with the Chesapeake Bay forming its eastern boundary — making water a defining feature of nearly every part of the county.
Source: Gloucester County, Virginia official government website
-
History
Gloucester County was formed in 1651 from York County, making it one of the oldest counties in Virginia and in the United States, with a history stretching back to the early colonial era.
Source: Library of Virginia / Virginia Places (vahistorical.org)
-
Transportation
Gloucester Point is connected to Yorktown and the Greater Hampton Roads area via the George P. Coleman Memorial Bridge (Route 17), a swing-span bridge over the York River that is one of the longest double-swing-span bridges in the world.
Source: Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT)
-
Local identity
Gloucester is widely known as the 'Daffodil Capital of the United States,' and each spring the county hosts the Daffodil Festival, celebrating the vast commercial daffodil fields that have been cultivated there for decades.
Source: Gloucester County, Virginia official government website / Daffodil Festival organizers
-
Landmarks
Rosewell, located in Gloucester County, was once considered one of the grandest colonial mansions in Virginia; though now in ruins, it remains a notable historic landmark and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Source: National Register of Historic Places / Historic Rosewell Foundation
-
Economy & service relevance
Agriculture, watermen's industries (including crabbing and oyster harvesting from the Chesapeake Bay), and small retail and service businesses along the Route 17 corridor form the backbone of Gloucester County's local economy.
Source: Gloucester County Economic Development Office