Bed bug control is among the most common pest issues we treat in Crown Heights. Older brownstones bring ant and 'water bug' issues from shared plumbing and damp basements.
Bed bug control in Crown Heights: what to know
Crown Heights mixes large pre-war apartment buildings along Eastern Parkway with brownstone side streets — the apartment stock drives heavy mouse and German-cockroach pressure through shared systems.
Dense commercial strips and high residential turnover sustain rodent pressure and make bed bugs a recurring concern in the rental buildings.
Older brownstones bring ant and 'water bug' issues from shared plumbing and damp basements.
Signs you need bed bug control
- Itchy bites in a line or cluster, often on arms, shoulders or legs after sleeping
- Small rust-coloured or dark spots on sheets, mattress seams or the headboard
- Tiny pale eggs or translucent shed skins along seams and crevices
- A faint, sweet, musty odour in heavily infested rooms
- Live bugs (apple-seed sized, flat, reddish-brown) in mattress seams or behind the headboard
How we treat bed bug control in Crown Heights
Bed bugs are one of the most stubborn pests in New York City, and they spread fast through the shared walls, hallways and laundry rooms of apartment buildings and brownstones. A single fertilised female can start a new infestation, which is why DIY sprays almost always fail — they scatter bugs into wall voids and adjacent units instead of killing the population.
Our bed bug programme starts with a full inspection (visual and, where needed, canine detection) to map every harbourage point: mattress seams, box springs, headboards, baseboards, outlets and furniture joints. We then treat with a combination of residual products and, for heavy infestations, whole-room heat that raises the space above the lethal threshold for eggs and adults alike.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Crown Heights and the surrounding Brooklyn area — including Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn Museum, Franklin Avenue — across ZIP codes 11213, 11225, 11238.