Wildlife removal in Greenwich Village: what to know
Greenwich Village's Federal and Greek Revival row houses around Washington Square Park are among Manhattan's most historic — their age brings original plumbing, shared party walls and cracked foundations that let rodents and cockroaches move between units and houses.
NYU's campus footprint and the dense restaurant and bar scene along MacDougal Street and Bleecker Street create constant food-source pressure, and the park itself is a major outdoor rodent habitat that feeds pressure into adjacent blocks.
The high volume of student rentals and frequent apartment turnover make bed bug vigilance especially important; ground-floor and garden units are prone to ant invasions through old foundation mortar.
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 Greenwich Village
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 Greenwich Village and the surrounding Manhattan area — including Washington Square Park, NYU Campus, MacDougal Street, Bleecker Street, The Village Vanguard — across ZIP codes 10011, 10012, 10014.