City-smart snow response
In Irvington, Kentucky, ProSnowRemoval handles tight streets, busy sidewalks, and storefronts with a city-ready game plan.
We pre-plan alleys, loading zones, and curbside parking so nothing is blocked.
Our culture is built on respect: clear communication with owners, careful edges near glass and landscaping, and quiet equipment choices for early morning pushes. We document every visit with photos and timestamps so you can show tenants, insurers, and city inspectors that you acted fast and kept public paths safe.
Reflective gear, cones on slick spots, and careful blade height near decorative pavers.
Reports delivered to your inbox for easy forwarding.
Documented safety checks on plows, blowers, and spreaders.
We match equipment to the block: compact plows for tight lanes, walk-behind blowers for long sidewalks, and hand crews for stairs and vestibules.
Hand shoveling, broom finish, and pet-safe melt where needed.
Drainage checked so melt runs away from doors and elevators.
Communication with building teams to time pushes with deliveries.
Follow-up sweeps in drifting or shaded areas.
We run quiet where we can, move quickly where we must, and always finish with clean edges and clear entrances. When ice threatens, we adjust blends; when plows push windrows onto your curb, we return to reopen; when temps swing, we sweep again so overnight refreeze does not surprise early commuters.
Crews staged inside Irvington, Kentucky so response times stay short
Refreeze patrols on shaded sidewalks and garage ramps
Add haul-away or loader time when storms stack up
We log lessons after each storm to make the next one smoother
Retail owner in Irvington, Kentucky: Customers walked in without dodging slush, and they sent photos before I arrived.
Condo board in Irvington, Kentucky: Every visit has timestamps and melt info, making compliance simple.
Resident in Irvington, Kentucky: No plow rash on the curbs and they brushed off windshields near the pile.
We start with a site walk to mark hydrants, drains, curb cuts, and stacking spots, capturing photos for the route book. We debrief after each storm to tighten the plan for the next one.
We adapt timing to delivery schedules and opening hours in Irvington, Kentucky.
We use rubber edges near curbs and pavers, lift blades at transitions, and avoid piling near trees or signage.
We schedule refreeze checks overnight and at dawn.
Every visit comes with photos, timestamps, and melt data.
Our standard is usable, slip-resistant pavementnot just a pass with a plow. We inspect for downspouts draining across walks, shaded black-ice zones, and spots where salt might scar metal thresholds, then adjust blends and techniques. Communication is part of the promise: ETAs before arrival, on-site updates during the storm, and photo proof when we finish.
We keep hydrants, bike racks, and bus stops clear so the block keeps moving. Accessibility matters: ADA ramps, tactile strips, and crosswalk entries get double sweeps; handrails are brushed so grip stays strong; shaded stairs get extra melt during temperature swings. After the storm, we walk the site: draining melt away from doors, checking for thin ice near gutters, and tidying pile edges so the block looks cared for.