Wildlife removal in Brighton Beach: what to know
Brighton Beach's elevated subway line along Brighton Beach Avenue creates a canopy of noise and shade beneath which a dense row of Russian and Eastern European restaurants, bakeries and food markets operates — the food-waste concentration beneath the elevated tracks is a primary driver of the area's heavy rodent and cockroach pressure.
The neighbourhood's older pre-war apartment buildings and Soviet-era-style medium-rise blocks have shared basements, centralised trash areas and ageing plumbing that give pests ready access between units on multiple floors.
Proximity to the ocean and the Boardwalk adds seasonal mosquito pressure from tidal wetland areas to the east, and the beach infrastructure creates a persistent rodent habitat that feeds into the residential blocks immediately inland.
Signs you need wildlife removal
- Scratching or scurrying in the attic, walls, or chimney
- Damaged soffits, vents, or roofline gaps
- Torn insulation or chewed wiring
- Animal droppings in an attic or crawl space
How we treat wildlife removal in Brighton Beach
Squirrels, raccoons and opossums get into attics, soffits, chimneys and wall voids — chewing wiring, tearing insulation and creating fire and health hazards. Removing the animal is only half the job; without sealing how it got in, another moves in.
We humanely remove the animal, check for young, and exclude the property — sealing entry points with durable materials so wildlife can't return. We work within New York's wildlife regulations throughout.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Brighton Beach and the surrounding Brooklyn area — including Brighton Beach Avenue, the Boardwalk, Brighton Beach subway station, Coney Island Creek — across ZIP codes 11235, 11224.