Risk & Safety

Hurricane Window Cleaning Protocol for Southeast High-Rises: A Technical Field Manual for Pre- and Post-Storm Facade Operations

The Atlantic hurricane season imposes operational constraints on Southeast high-rise portfolios that no other regional weather phenomenon approaches in severity or complexity. Between June 1 and November 30, building owners from Wilmington to Pensacola must reconcile aggressive exterior maintenance schedules with the certainty that at least one named system will threaten landfall, and the statistical likelihood that a Category 1 or stronger storm will affect operations within any rolling three-year window. A defensible hurricane window cleaning protocol — frequently dismissed as a discretionary aesthetic line item — becomes, during these months, a critical risk-management function with implications for anchor system integrity, glazing longevity, insurance recovery, and contractor liability.

This guide establishes a technical protocol for pre-storm lockdown, post-storm re-access, accelerated residue removal, and documentation. It is written for facility managers, building engineers, and asset managers responsible for Class A commercial high-rises, mixed-use towers, and institutional structures in the hurricane-exposed Southeast. The procedures reflect OSHA 1910.27, ANSI/IWCA I-14.1, SPRAT and IRATA rope access standards, ASTM E2270 and E2271 glass condition assessment criteria, and the operational realities of staging rope-access crews across the Carolinas, Georgia, and the Florida panhandle during compressed post-storm windows.

The 72-Hour Pre-Storm Hurricane Window Cleaning Protocol: Anchors, Davits, and Rooftop Equipment

A structured lockdown sequence begins well before tropical storm conditions arrive. The standard trigger for initiating a pre-storm facade lockdown is a building's geographic position entering the National Hurricane Center's five-day forecast cone with sustained winds projected at or above tropical storm force (39 mph). For most Southeast coastal and near-coastal properties, this corresponds to a 96- to 72-hour operational window. Waiting for the 48-hour cone is a frequent operational failure: contractor mobilization, equipment retrieval, and helper logistics cannot reliably compress into that timeframe once multiple buildings in a market simultaneously activate their protocols.

96–72 Hours: Cessation of Active Descent Work

All rope descent system (RDS) operations, swing stage deployments, and water-fed pole work at heights above 40 feet must cease when the NHC's third advisory places the building inside the cone. This is not a wind-driven decision at the 72-hour mark — it is a logistical one. Crews must remain available to execute lockdown procedures, and a partially completed scope creates anchor loads and equipment exposures that complicate securement.

72–48 Hours: Rooftop Equipment Removal and Securement

The following items must be removed from the roof, weighted to manufacturer specifications, or secured to engineered tie-down points:

48–24 Hours: Permanent System Inspection and Lockout

Permanent building maintenance units (BMUs), roof cars, and monorail trolley systems require manufacturer-specified storm preparation. For most CoxGomyl, Manntech, and equivalent OEM units installed on Southeast Class A towers, this includes:

For dedicated davit arms and pendant systems, removable components must be detached and stored, with permanent base assemblies inspected for corrosion and fastener torque per the original engineering specification — typically Grade 5 or Grade 8 fasteners torqued to manufacturer values between 75 and 150 ft-lbs depending on bolt diameter.

24–0 Hours: Final Walkthrough and Documentation

The final pre-storm walkthrough must produce a dated, time-stamped photographic record of every rooftop anchor, BMU position, removed-equipment storage location, and any pre-existing facade condition. This documentation is foundational to post-storm insurance claims and to the contractor's own liability position. A signed lockdown checklist countersigned by the facility manager and the rope access supervisor closes the pre-storm phase.

Post-Storm Facade Triage and Building Maintenance Southeast Operations: When It Is Safe to Re-Access the Envelope

The pressure to resume facade operations after a storm — driven by tenant complaints, visible debris fields on glazing, and executive expectations of rapid normalization — produces one of the most dangerous moments in the annual maintenance cycle. Rope descent and stage operations conducted before structured triage has cleared the envelope expose technicians to fall hazards, anchor failures, and falling-object risks categorically different from routine operating conditions. Disciplined post-storm building maintenance Southeast operators understand that recovery speed depends on triage discipline, not its absence.

Phase One: Atmospheric and Site Clearance (0–24 Hours Post-Landfall)

No exterior work of any kind may commence while sustained winds exceed 15 mph or gusts exceed 25 mph at the affected elevation. Rooftop wind conditions on a 300-foot tower can exceed ground-level readings by 40 to 60 percent due to boundary layer effects, and post-storm gradient winds frequently remain elevated for 12 to 36 hours after the eye passes. The NOAA local NWS office forecast discussion — not consumer weather applications — serves as the reference source.

Site access must also be verified: standing water, downed power lines, displaced site furniture, and compromised ground-level glazing all preclude rope-access staging at the building perimeter.

Phase Two: Rooftop and Anchor System Inspection

Before any rope descent resumes, every anchor that will be loaded must receive a documented post-storm inspection. The IWCA I-14.1 standard requires annual recertification of permanent anchorages by a Qualified Person; a major hurricane event constitutes a triggering condition for off-cycle recertification regardless of when the annual inspection occurred.

Inspection criteria include:

Phase Three: Hurricane Facade Damage Assessment from Stationary Positions

Before suspending a technician from any anchor, the facade itself must undergo a hurricane facade damage assessment for falling-object hazards. The assessment is performed from the roof edge, from balconies, and from grade-level visual inspection with binoculars and UAV-based imaging. CBS standard protocol incorporates a Part 107-certified drone survey for buildings above 150 feet, producing georeferenced imagery of all four elevations within four hours of clearance to fly.

Critical conditions that must be identified and either remediated or zoned off before rope descent resumes:

Only after this triage produces a documented, signed clearance does rope-access work resume — and even then, often in zones, with damaged sections sequenced for specialized restoration work rather than routine cleaning.

Why Storm Residue Bonds to Glass — and the Accelerated Cleaning Window

The chemistry of post-storm facade soiling is fundamentally different from routine urban grime, and this distinction drives the accelerated cleaning timeline that defines post-storm operations across the Southeast.

Salt Aerosol Deposition and Silicate Bonding

Hurricane-driven salt aerosol is delivered to glazing surfaces at concentrations 50 to 200 times normal coastal background levels. The sodium chloride and magnesium chloride components are hygroscopic, drawing atmospheric moisture into a persistent thin-film electrolyte on the glass surface. In the presence of this electrolyte, two degradation mechanisms initiate within the first

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