Exterior Cleaning Members of the National Cleaning Authority Network
Exterior cleaning encompasses a distinct category of professional services that address building facades, rooflines, driveways, gutters, windows, and surrounding hardscapes — surfaces exposed to weathering, biological growth, and airborne contaminants that interior cleaning methods cannot reach. This page profiles the member sites within the National Cleaning Authority Network that specialize in exterior cleaning disciplines, explains how those disciplines are classified, and outlines the decision boundaries that distinguish one service type from another. Understanding these distinctions helps property owners, facility managers, and contractors identify the appropriate resource for any exterior cleaning scenario.
Definition and scope
Exterior cleaning refers to the professional removal of dirt, biological matter (algae, mold, mildew, lichen), oxidation, efflorescence, paint overspray, and other surface contaminants from outdoor structures. The category spans residential, commercial, and industrial applications and is defined primarily by the surface type, the cleaning mechanism used, and the pressure or chemical profile required.
Within the National Cleaning Authority Network, exterior cleaning members are distinguished from residential cleaning members and commercial cleaning members by their focus on surfaces exposed to the outdoor environment rather than interior spaces. The four primary exterior cleaning disciplines recognized by the network are:
- Pressure washing — high-pressure water delivery (typically 1,500–4,000 PSI) used on concrete, brick, stone, and other hard, dense surfaces capable of withstanding mechanical force.
- Soft washing — low-pressure water delivery (typically 40–500 PSI) combined with surfactant-based cleaning solutions, used on surfaces that cannot tolerate high pressure: roofing shingles, painted wood siding, stucco, and EIFS.
- Gutter cleaning — removal of organic debris, sediment, and blockages from gutter channels and downspout systems to maintain drainage integrity.
- Window cleaning — removal of mineral deposits, environmental film, and biological contamination from glazed surfaces using squeegee, pure-water, or water-fed pole systems.
The Exterior Cleaning Industry Association (ECIA) and the Pressure Washers of North America (PWNA) both publish training and certification standards that define acceptable pressure ranges, chemical concentrations, and surface-specific protocols across these disciplines.
How it works
Exterior cleaning services follow a surface assessment, method selection, and post-treatment sequence. A trained technician evaluates surface material, contamination type, and structural condition before selecting pressure level and chemical profile. Applying the wrong pressure to an inappropriate substrate — for example, using 3,000 PSI on asphalt shingles — can cause irreversible granule loss and void manufacturer warranties, a failure mode documented in guidelines published by the Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association (ARMA).
The National Power Washing Authority covers pressure washing standards, equipment specifications, and surface compatibility across residential driveways, commercial parking structures, and industrial facilities. It is the primary network resource for understanding PSI thresholds, nozzle selection, and regulatory considerations around wastewater containment.
For low-pressure applications, National Soft Wash Authority provides detailed coverage of chemical dilution ratios, dwell time protocols, and the biology of algae and lichen remediation on roofing and siding materials. Soft washing accounts for the majority of residential roof cleaning work because asphalt shingles — which dominate roughly 80% of U.S. residential roofing by installation volume (ARMA market data) — cannot safely withstand mechanical pressure.
Power Washing Authority complements the national resource by focusing on contractor-level operational guidance: equipment maintenance, surface-specific technique breakdowns, and the distinction between consumer-grade and commercial-grade pressure washing equipment.
For window cleaning specifically, National Window Cleaning Authority addresses both residential and commercial glazing, covering pure-water systems, water-fed pole reach, and high-rise access methods including rope descent and aerial lift compliance under OSHA 29 CFR 1910 Subpart D (OSHA, Walking-Working Surfaces).
Common scenarios
Exterior cleaning scenarios vary by structure type, contamination source, and seasonal pattern. The most frequently encountered situations include:
- Post-winter driveway and sidewalk cleaning: Salt residue and freeze-thaw debris accumulate on concrete flatwork. Pressure washing at 2,500–3,500 PSI with a surface cleaner attachment is the standard method.
- Annual roof soft washing: Algae (Gloeocapsa magma) produces the characteristic black streaking on asphalt shingles in humid climates. Sodium hypochlorite solutions at 1–3% concentration, combined with a surfactant, are the industry-standard treatment per PWNA guidelines.
- Gutter clearing before storm season: Gutters clogged with leaf debris redirect water toward fascia boards and foundation perimeters, accelerating wood rot and hydrostatic pressure against basement walls. Gutter Cleaning Authority documents inspection protocols, downspout flushing sequences, and the criteria that distinguish cleanable gutters from those requiring structural replacement.
- Commercial facade restoration: Brick, concrete, and EIFS facades accumulate efflorescence, diesel exhaust particulate, and graffiti. Each contaminant type requires a different chemical profile and pressure range.
- State-level regulatory compliance: Wastewater from pressure washing may be classified as a pollutant discharge under the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.) if it enters storm drains. California Cleaning Authority addresses state-specific environmental compliance requirements that exterior cleaning contractors operating in California must follow under Regional Water Quality Control Board permits.
For operators and property managers in the southeastern U.S., Florida Cleaning Authority covers the high-humidity, mold-accelerated conditions that make exterior cleaning a higher-frequency maintenance requirement in that region compared to arid or temperate climates.
Decision boundaries
Choosing the correct exterior cleaning method requires matching the cleaning mechanism to the surface's structural tolerance and the contaminant's chemical composition. The central contrast is pressure washing versus soft washing:
| Factor | Pressure Washing | Soft Washing |
|---|---|---|
| Operating PSI | 1,500–4,000 PSI | 40–500 PSI |
| Primary mechanism | Mechanical force | Chemical action |
| Suitable surfaces | Concrete, brick, stone, metal | Shingles, painted wood, stucco, EIFS |
| Contaminant targets | Oil, grime, loose paint, mud | Algae, mold, mildew, lichen |
| Wastewater concern | High (surface runoff volume) | Moderate (chemical residue) |
A second decision boundary separates gutter cleaning from gutter replacement. Cleaning is appropriate when gutters retain structural integrity — no holes, separated seams, or severe slope deviation. Replacement is indicated when the fascia behind the gutter shows active rot or when the gutter profile has deformed beyond the 1/4-inch-per-10-feet slope standard recommended by the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).
Window cleaning introduces a third boundary: pure-water systems versus traditional squeegee. Pure-water (deionized or reverse-osmosis) systems leave no mineral residue and are preferred for exterior glass above two stories because they eliminate the need for a technician to contact the glass directly. Traditional squeegee methods remain standard at ground and first-floor levels where direct access is practical.
For a broader orientation to how these exterior services fit within the full cleaning industry taxonomy, the conceptual overview of how cleaning services works provides the definitional framework used across all network member properties.
The Cleaning Services Authority serves as a cross-discipline reference that bridges exterior and interior service categories, providing the comparative context needed when a property requires both types of work under a unified service contract.
References
- Pressure Washers of North America (PWNA) — industry standards body for pressure and soft washing training, certification, and chemical protocols.
- Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association (ARMA) — publishes installation and maintenance guidelines for asphalt shingles, including pressure restrictions.
- Exterior Cleaning Industry Association (ECIA) — trade organization defining scope-of-work standards and surface classification guidance for exterior cleaning contractors.
- OSHA 29 CFR 1910 Subpart D — Walking-Working Surfaces — federal safety standards governing elevated access in window cleaning and facade work.
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency — Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251 — federal statute governing discharge of pollutants including pressure washing wastewater into navigable waters.
- National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) — publishes residential construction and maintenance standards including gutter slope tolerances.