
The COVID pandemic generated a fundamental shift in what businesses expected from their commercial cleaning services. At Cross Town Cleaning we found the shutdown created two types of businesses. First were clients with buildings that were ghost towns because people were furloughed. In these situations, customers initially wanted a thorough cleaning but then suspended services – because why clean if nobody is in the building. The other group of clients were on the front lines – like medical clinics or other service industries. In these situations the clients became much more educated, expecting sanitizing and not just cleaning. Many of them had never thought of this differentiation before, but now it was crucial.
Now we’re finding that even though the concerns over COVID are more relaxed, the interest in sanitizing remains high. Clients continue to have an increased focus on eliminating germs and not just getting rid of dirt.
Cross Town Cleaning has always provided comprehensive cleaning, sanitizing and disinfecting of the surfaces on hardware in offices and communal areas of our clients’ commercial buildings, warehouses, clinics and other facilities. But now we’re receiving increased interest in our Electrostatic Disinfection and Touch Point Disinfection.
Electrostatic disinfection is the touchless process of spraying an electrostatically charged mist onto surfaces and objects, causing a wraparound effect that ensures hard to reach places get touched. After the spray is applied, the sanitizing agent works to disinfect the covered surfaces. For this reason, electrostatic spraying is an excellent solution for germ and contaminant ridden areas.
Reduces cross-contamination
Liquid adhesion & coverage allows solution to cover even hidden & shadow areas
Electrostatic solutions wrap conductive surfaces
ECO friendly with up to 65% less chemicals per sq ft
With Touch Point Disinfection we focus on areas or items that are touched frequently by multiple people. Light switches, doorknobs, push plates, handrails, elevator buttons, drawer handles and any other high-touch surfaces we identify as the most likely places to pick up viruses and bacteria.
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