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Perth's Mediterranean climate is deceptively mould-prone. While summers are hot and dry, the May–September winter period delivers 600–900mm of concentrated rainfall — most of Perth's annual total arriving in five months. During this window, subfloor spaces and wall cavities in homes with inadequate drainage or cross-ventilation accumulate significant moisture. If that moisture is not removed by mechanical drying, mould establishes within 24–48 hours.
Perth's housing stock adds a specific vulnerability: a large proportion of homes built during the 1970s–1990s construction boom used fibrous cement (fibro) sheeting for walls and eaves. Fibro is a porous material that absorbs moisture readily, holds it for extended periods, and provides an ideal substrate for mould colonisation. The 2021 Perth storm event caused widespread flooding across north-western suburbs, and many fibro-clad properties in those areas are still presenting with recurring mould years later — evidence of incomplete structural drying at the time of the original event.
Compounding the problem: Perth's summer temperatures regularly exceed 40°C. In materials that were damp during winter and never fully dried, the heat of summer accelerates mould growth dramatically. Properties that show no visible mould in June can have significant wall cavity colonisation by February.
The Perth Hills — encompassing Kalamunda, Mundaring, Roleystone, and surrounding communities — carry significant bushfire risk. Following a fire event, the immediate focus is on fire damage. But mould is the delayed consequence that many Perth Hills property owners underestimate.
Fire suppression operations — aerial water bombing, ground crews, and residential sprinkler activation — introduce large volumes of water into affected structures. This water saturates wall framing, insulation, subfloor timbers, and any fibro cladding. In properties within BAL (Bushfire Attack Level) zones, rebuilding timelines are often extended — BAL compliance assessments, council approvals, and contractor availability can delay restoration for months. During this period, water-saturated materials sit undried, and mould establishes throughout the structure.
Perth Hills winters amplify this risk: if fire suppression occurs in summer and restoration is delayed into the May–September wet period, the property is exposed to additional moisture ingress on top of existing suppression water. The result is frequently extensive mould throughout the structure before a single piece of rebuilding work has begun.
NRPG provides post-fire mould assessment and full remediation for Perth Hills properties. Mould scope is documented to IICRC S520 standard for fire insurance claim submission, and remediation is coordinated alongside any fire damage restoration scope where applicable.
Cost estimates are indicative only and depend on property size, extent of contamination, material type (fibro vs. plasterboard), and whether structural opening is required. All NRPG remediation is performed to IICRC S520 standard with post-remediation clearance testing.
48-hour response across the greater Perth metropolitan area and the Perth Hills:
Inner West: Perth CBD, West Perth, Subiaco, Nedlands, Claremont, Cottesloe, Fremantle, Scarborough
Inner / Mid West: Leederville, Mount Lawley, Northbridge, Inglewood, Bayswater, Victoria Park, South Perth
Northern Corridor: Joondalup, Wanneroo, Yanchep, Two Rocks, Clarkson, Butler, Quinns Rocks
Eastern / Hills: Midland, Kalamunda, Mundaring, Roleystone, Armadale, Byford, Serpentine
Southern Corridor: Rockingham, Mandurah, Baldivis, Kwinana, Cockburn, Hamilton Hill, Fremantle South
Storm damage restoration and insurance claim support across Perth.
Post-fire restoration for Perth Hills and metropolitan Perth properties.
Emergency flood damage restoration across all Perth suburbs.
Emergency water damage restoration across all Perth suburbs.
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