The musty odor greets you at the threshold. Faint in the hallway, stronger near certain rooms, almost overwhelming in the basement. You have checked under sinks. You have looked in closets. You pulled back the shower curtain and inspected the grout. Nothing. No dark spots. No fuzzy patches. No visible mold anywhere.
But your nose is not lying to you. Mold produces microbial volatile organic compounds — gases released as the organism digests organic material — and those compounds are what create that distinctive earthy, damp, sometimes sour smell. If you can smell it in your Lewiston, ME home, it is growing somewhere. It is just growing where you cannot see it.
Visible mold on a bathroom ceiling or a kitchen window frame is easy to spot and relatively simple to clean. Hidden mold is a completely different situation. It colonizes materials inside enclosed spaces where moisture is present and airflow is minimal — exactly the conditions mold needs to thrive.
Behind drywall is one of the most common locations. A slow pipe leak inside a wall cavity can keep the back face of drywall wet for weeks or months without any visible sign on the front of the wall. The paper facing on the back side of gypsum board is an excellent food source for mold. By the time you notice discoloration on the painted surface, the colony behind the wall may extend several square feet in every direction from the moisture source.
Crawlspaces in Lewiston, ME homes are another frequent hiding spot. Ground moisture evaporates into the crawlspace, condenses on cool floor joists and subfloor sheathing, and creates a permanent damp environment. If the crawlspace lacks a proper vapor barrier or has inadequate ventilation, mold can colonize the entire underside of your floor structure without you ever knowing. The musty smell migrates upward through gaps in the flooring, register openings, and around plumbing penetrations.
HVAC ductwork is perhaps the most concerning location because the system actively distributes mold spores throughout your entire home. Condensation forms on the interior surfaces of supply ducts, particularly near the evaporator coil where air temperature drops rapidly. Dust inside the ductwork provides nutrients. Combine moisture, nutrients, and darkness and mold can colonize the lining of your air distribution system. Every time your system cycles on, it pushes spore-laden air into every room.
Finding hidden mold requires tools and techniques that go beyond visual inspection. Our detection process uses three complementary methods.
Infrared thermal imaging cameras detect temperature differences on wall, ceiling, and floor surfaces. Moisture trapped behind a wall cools the surface slightly compared to the surrounding dry area, creating a thermal anomaly visible on camera. This technology lets us scan entire rooms in minutes and identify areas of concern without making a single hole in your wall. It does not detect mold directly, but it reliably identifies the moisture conditions where mold grows.
Pin-type and pinless moisture meters let us quantify what the thermal camera flags. A pin meter drives two small probes into the material and measures electrical resistance to give us an exact moisture content percentage. A pinless meter uses radio frequency scanning to check materials without penetration. We use both to confirm moisture presence and determine the extent of the wet zone before recommending any demolition.
When we need to confirm mold presence definitively, air sampling provides laboratory-verified data. We collect air samples from suspect areas and from a clean outdoor control location, then send them to an accredited laboratory for spore identification and quantification. The lab report tells us not just whether mold is present, but which species are present and at what concentration relative to normal outdoor levels. That information shapes our remediation protocol.
Once we locate and confirm hidden mold, the remediation follows IICRC S520 protocols designed to remove the contamination without spreading it to clean areas of your home.
We establish containment first. Polyethylene sheeting seals off the work area from the rest of your Lewiston, ME home. Negative air machines equipped with HEPA filters pull air from inside the containment zone and exhaust it outside, creating lower air pressure inside the work area than outside it. This pressure differential ensures that when we disturb mold during removal, the spores get pulled into the filter rather than drifting into your living spaces.
Inside containment, we remove all mold-contaminated materials. Drywall with mold on the back face gets cut out beyond the visible colony boundary. Insulation in contaminated wall cavities gets removed. If mold has colonized structural lumber like studs or joists, we abrasively clean the wood surface to remove the growth and apply antimicrobial treatment. Unlike drywall, structural wood can typically be saved because the mold does not penetrate deeply into solid lumber.
For HVAC mold, the approach involves cleaning the ductwork interior with HEPA-filtered vacuum equipment, cleaning or replacing the evaporator coil, and treating the system with antimicrobial solution. If duct lining material is contaminated, it may need replacement since the fibrous material harbors mold at a level that surface cleaning cannot resolve.
After removal is complete, we conduct post-clearance air testing. A third-party inspector collects air samples from inside the remediation area with the containment still in place. The lab results must show mold spore counts at or below normal outdoor levels before we remove containment and consider the job complete. This verification step protects you with documented proof that the remediation was successful.
Your Lewiston, ME home is giving you a signal, and it is not going to stop until you find the source. Mold does not plateau. It does not stop growing on its own. Every day the moisture source continues feeding the colony, it spreads further into your building materials and releases more spores into your air.
Call 1-833-541-0100 today. We will come out with thermal cameras and moisture meters, scan your home, and give you a straight answer about what is going on behind your walls, under your floors, and inside your ductwork. If it is mold, we will find it. If it is not, you can stop worrying. Either way, you will finally know.
"Months of a musty hallway smell in our Lewiston, ME home were solved in minutes. Using a thermal camera, the team found a hidden leak and mold colony behind the tub. They contained the area, fixed the valve, and cleared the mold. We had no idea it was that bad."
"Our unsealed crawlspace in Lewiston, ME had mold over half the floor joists and subfloor. The team established containment, HEPA vacuumed, applied antimicrobial, and installed a vapor barrier. The years-long musty odor vanished within days. We should have done this sooner."
"I kept getting sinus infections and my doctor suggested environmental factors. The mold inspection team found heavy growth inside our HVAC supply ducts — right on the duct lining near the evaporator coil. They showed me photos from a duct camera and it was disturbing how much was in there. The crew cleaned the entire system, replaced sections of contaminated duct lining, and treated the coil. My symptoms cleared up within two weeks. The air in our Lewiston, ME home feels completely different now."
The Lewiston area traces its roots to 1669 with the early presence of the Androscoggin tribe (the namesake of the county in which the city resides). In the late 18th century, in 1795, Lewiston was incorporated as Lewistown. The presence of the Androscoggin River and Lewistown Falls made the town an attractive area for manufacturing and hydro-power businesses. The rise of Boston rail and textile tycoon Benjamin Bates saw rapid economic growth rivaling that of Cambridge, Worcester, and Concord. Irish immigrants were recruited to build the railroad links and dig the canals for the textile mills. The Irish stayed, and worked the mills and established flourishing businesses, as evidenced by the McGillicuddy, Callahan, and other Blocks and the St.Joseph's and St.Patrick's churches. In the 1850 Census Lewiston was fully 23% Irish born. The increase in economic stimulus prompted thousands of Quebecers to migrate, causing a population boom; the populace rose from 1,801 in 1840 to 21,701 in 1890. In 1855, local preacher Oren Burbank Cheney founded the Maine State Seminary, the first coeducational university in New England and one of the first universities to admit black students before the Emancipation Proclamation. Lewistown quickly became associated with the liberal arts and was incorporated as "Lewiston" in 1864, a year before the college was chartered as Bates College.
Zip Codes in Lewiston, ME that we also serve: 04240 04241 04243