Strata pest control with documentation councils can use
We structure visit notes so councils can file them: where we inspected, what we found, what we did, and what we recommend next. That matters when rodent pressure returns after landscaping changes or when roof access is required for wasps at a penthouse soffit.
Common vs limited common property — why scope matters
Garbage enclosures, parkade perimeters, and exterior bait stations are usually common property. Patios, exclusive-use storage, and some exterior doors may be limited common or owner responsibility. We label scope in writing so invoices match bylaws and contracts — we do not blur lines to speed a signature.
Rodents, wildlife, and wasps in shared envelopes
Rats follow utility lines and parkade edges. Raccoons test enclosure doors. Wasps anchor to eaves above walkways. Each needs a different staging plan for tenant safety and notice requirements. We coordinate timing when dog walks and school pickup traffic peak.
Program options: baseline monitoring to full IPM
Light programs focus on exterior monitoring and seasonal wasp response. Heavier files add interior common-line inspection, fly management in garbage rooms, and bird pressure referrals tobird control when ledges are the driver.
How we work with property managers
We mirror your communication style — email summaries, work orders, photo attachments — and we flag capital items (door sweeps, concrete gaps, enclosure hardware) when pest labor alone will not hold.
Related services
Commercial tenants in the same building may needcommercial programs layered with strata common work — we keep reporting separate when required.
Comparestrata pest control in North Vancouver for similar governance patterns on different building stock.