Cockroach control is among the most common pest issues we treat in Inwood. The park edge means seasonal mosquito and tick pressure for ground-floor and garden apartments.
Cockroach control in Inwood: what to know
Inwood sits at Manhattan's northern tip beside Inwood Hill Park — the only natural forest left on the island — so homes here see more wildlife pressure (squirrels, raccoons) alongside the usual urban rodents and roaches.
Pre-war apartment stock along Dyckman Street and Seaman Avenue has the deep voids and shared plumbing that let cockroaches and mice move between units.
The park edge means seasonal mosquito and tick pressure for ground-floor and garden apartments.
Signs you need cockroach control
- Live roaches in the kitchen or bathroom, especially at night
- Larger 'water bugs' emerging from basement drains or aging shared plumbing
- Activity at deep baseboard gaps or shared wall voids in pre-war buildings
- Cockroach pressure increasing in units closest to the 125th Street/Lenox Avenue restaurant corridor
How we treat cockroach control in Inwood
Harlem's pre-war apartment buildings, brownstones and walk-ups have deep baseboard gaps, shared wall voids and aging plumbing that let cockroaches travel freely between units — a very different picture from a newer, sealed building where an infestation usually stays contained to one apartment.
Brownstone conversions carry a specific version of this problem: 'water bugs' rising through old shared plumbing from basements is a documented pattern in this housing stock, distinct from the smaller German cockroach activity that shows up in kitchens. We check the basement and plumbing runs, not just the kitchen where the sighting happened.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Inwood and the surrounding Manhattan area — including Inwood Hill Park, Dyckman Street, Isham Park — across ZIP codes 10034, 10040.