Rodent Removal
Edison, NJ
Protecting Edison's 1950s-Era Homes From the Mice That Love Their Aging Foundations
With 107,000+ residents spread across 30 square miles of mature post-war suburbs, Edison's mid-century housing stock and proximity to the Raritan River create ideal conditions for both mice and rats year-round.
Ranch Homes, Split-Levels, and the Mice That Move In With You
Edison exploded from a collection of rural crossroad villages into a full-blown suburb during the 1950s and 1960s, when the New Jersey Turnpike and Garden State Parkway suddenly made it commutable. That building boom left behind tens of thousands of ranch homes, split-levels, and Cape Cods now entering their sixth or seventh decade -- and showing it in ways that mice appreciate far more than homeowners do. House mice are the dominant rodent problem across Edison's residential neighborhoods, from Clara Barton to Stelton to North Edison. These homes were built with construction techniques that have aged into open invitations: settling foundations with hairline cracks, original sill plates pulling away from masonry, and dryer vents with damaged flaps. A house mouse needs just a quarter-inch gap, and a 1960s split-level offers dozens of candidates. Norway rats are a secondary but real concern, particularly in neighborhoods along the Raritan River on Edison's southern border and near the 650-acre Dismal Swamp wetland preserve. Roosevelt Park's 217-acre footprint with its 8-acre lake also supports rodent populations that spread into adjacent residential streets. Anywhere stormwater infrastructure connects to these waterways, Norway rats use the underground network as a highway system.
Why Edison?
Edison's massive stock of 1950s-1970s single-family homes with aging foundations and original utility penetrations provides ideal harborage for house mice across every neighborhood.
Rodent Species in Edison
Most common rodent pest in Edison
How to Know You Have Rodents in Edison
Spot these warning signs before the problem gets worse
Mouse droppings in the dead space behind kitchen cabinets in ranch-style homes -- a gap between the cabinet back and the exterior wall that was standard in 1960s construction
Gnaw marks on the rubber gaskets of garage-to-house fire doors, where mice chew through the weather seal to access heated living space
Musty odor from contaminated fiberglass insulation in crawl spaces beneath split-level family rooms built on slab-on-grade with no vapor barrier
Acorn and seed caches in the recessed lighting fixtures of drop ceilings in finished basements, left by white-footed mice entering from wooded lots
Noticed any of these signs?
Rodents reproduce fast. A small problem today becomes a full infestation within weeks.
Call for Same-Day InspectionSix Decades of Settling Foundations and Outdated Weatherproofing
Edison's housing stock tells a clear story: rapid post-war construction meant to house the suburban boom, now aging in ways that benefit rodents. The ranch homes and split-levels that define neighborhoods like Nixon, New Dover, and Clara Barton were built with poured concrete or block foundations that have had 60-plus years to develop cracks and gaps. Original wooden sill plates sit directly on masonry in many homes, and the gaps where they have shrunk or pulled away are classic mouse entry points. Attached garages -- a hallmark of 1960s suburban design -- create a warm, sheltered staging area where mice establish themselves before finding routes into living spaces through shared walls.
01Common Entry Points
02How Rodents Get Established
Clara Barton Split-Level: Mice in the Offset Walls
01 The Problem
The homeowners of a 1963 split-level in Clara Barton were hearing scratching and scurrying between the bedroom level and the lower family room for months. They had set snap traps in the basement and kitchen without success, because the mice were traveling through the offset wall cavities that connect the different levels of a split-level home -- spaces that are essentially inaccessible without knowing the architecture.
Location: Clara Barton
02 What We Discovered
Inspection revealed mice were entering through a deteriorated dryer vent on the lower-level exterior wall and traveling upward through the stud bays in the half-wall that separates the split levels. Droppings and nesting material were found concentrated in the fiberglass insulation within these wall cavities. A secondary entry point was identified where the original copper water supply line penetrated the basement slab with no sealant.
03 The Solution
All exterior penetrations on the lower level were sealed with steel mesh and professional-grade sealant, including the dryer vent replacement with a pest-proof model. Interior access points between levels were sealed at the sill plate transitions. Contaminated insulation in the offset wall cavities was removed and replaced after full sanitization. A one-way exclusion device was temporarily installed at the primary entry to allow any remaining mice to exit.
The Result
Complete elimination of mouse activity within two weeks of exclusion work. A follow-up inspection at 90 days confirmed no re-entry, with all exclusion points intact.
Rodent Challenges Specific to Edison
Split-level home architecture creates interconnected wall cavities between offset floors that mice use as vertical highways -- a design feature unique to Edison's 1960s building boom
The 650-acre Dismal Swamp preserve and Raritan River corridor support rodent populations that continuously pressure adjacent residential neighborhoods
Edison's dense South Asian restaurant and grocery corridor along Oak Tree Road generates food waste that sustains elevated rodent populations in the Iselin-adjacent commercial zones
Original 1950s-era cast iron plumbing penetrations through basement slabs have corroded and separated from the concrete, creating subslab entry points for both mice and rats
Mature landscaping with decades-old foundation plantings grown tight against homes creates harborage and conceals foundation-level entry points from visual inspection
Roosevelt Park's 217 acres with lake and stream habitat function as a rodent reservoir, with populations radiating outward into the surrounding residential grid
Rodent Removal Service Areas in Edison
We serve all Edison neighborhoods and surrounding areas
Edison Neighborhoods We Serve
ZIP Codes Served
Rodent Removal in Nearby Cities
We Don't Use Poison
Most pest control companies will lay bait and leave. The rodents eat the poison, crawl into your walls, and die. Then you get the smell. That rotting-animal stench that seeps through drywall and can last for weeks.
Worse, poison doesn't fix the entry points. New rodents follow the same scent trails right back in. You end up on an endless cycle of baiting, dying, and stinking.
No Dead Rodents in Walls
Poison means carcasses you can't reach. We remove them alive.
No Recurring Bait Contracts
We seal entry points permanently. One visit, lasting results.
Exclusion-First Method
Find the gaps, seal the gaps, guarantee the gaps stay sealed.
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