Bird control in Hollis: what to know
Hollis is a residential Queens neighbourhood of detached and semi-detached homes with yards on tree-lined streets between Jamaica Avenue and Hillside Avenue — the housing profile brings classic suburban pest issues: ants through foundation cracks, stinging insects in eave nests, and occasional-invaders entering around doors and windows.
Jamaica Avenue's commercial corridor sustains rodent pressure that enters adjacent residential properties through basement gaps; older homes along Hollis Avenue with larger lots and mature trees face more wildlife and stinging-insect pressure than properties on smaller plots.
Proximity to the Hillside Avenue commercial strip and the surrounding mixed-use blocks keeps cockroach and rodent activity elevated in multi-family buildings and ground-floor commercial-to-residential transitions.
Signs you need bird control
- Droppings accumulating on ledges, signage, AC units, or walkways
- Pigeons roosting on the same ledges or under the same overhang
- Nests in vents, gutters, or behind signage
How we treat bird control in Hollis
Pigeons are a New York fixture, but their droppings damage facades, signage and AC units, carry health risks and create slip hazards. Nests block vents and gutters. The goal isn't to harm the birds — it's to make the surfaces they roost on unavailable.
We install humane deterrents — bird netting, ledge spikes and exclusion — matched to the building, and remove existing nests and droppings safely. The result is a building birds simply move on from.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Hollis and the surrounding Queens area — including Hillside Avenue, Francis Lewis Boulevard, Hollis Avenue, Jamaica Avenue — across ZIP codes 11423.