A cleaning crew arriving to a site without power, an accessible dumpster, or confirmed trade coordination can’t work and the mobilization cost still applies. Worse, active trades working in areas being cleaned re-contaminate surfaces immediately, turning a one-day final clean into a two-day job.
Thirty minutes of pre-mobilization confirmation with your superintendent prevents four to eight hours of delays, re-cleans, or rescheduling on the days that matter most.
This checklist covers every item your superintendent needs to confirm from hard stops that prevent the crew from even entering the building to trade coordination, hazmat disclosure, utility confirmation, and phase-specific readiness checks.
Built for: General contractors, project managers, and superintendents on commercial builds across the Southeast.
If any of these items are not resolved, do not release the cleaning crew to mobilize. Resolve first, then reschedule.
The full PDF adds hazmat disclosure requirements for 10 material types, 8 sections covering access, utilities, debris, OSHA safety, trade coordination, and documentation plus a phase-specific readiness table for all four cleaning phases.
Hard stops, access confirmation, utility checks, OSHA safety requirements, hazmat disclosure for 10 material types, trade coordination by phase, documentation the GC should have ready, and a quick-reference readiness table for all four cleaning phases.
Enter your email below to get instant access to the complete 6-page PDF. We’ll send it directly to your inbox.
🔒 Your email is yours. We will never sell, rent, or share your information with any third party.
You’ll receive the checklist and occasional project tips from CleanSiteUSA unsubscribe any time with one click. That’s it.
Send it to your superintendent 48–72 hours before mobilization — not the morning of. Most of the items on this list take time to resolve. Gate codes need to be programmed. Dumpsters need to be positioned or emptied. Trade foremen need to be told their crews are not re-entering certain floors. None of that happens in 30 minutes the morning the cleaning crew shows up.
Use the Hard Stops section as your go/no-go gate. If any hard stop is unresolved, the crew should not mobilize. A partial mobilization that gets halted after an hour wastes time and money for everyone. The 10 minutes it takes to verify these saves hours.
The trade coordination section is the most frequently skipped. Superintendents confirm that trades are done, but forget to tell trade foremen they’re not re-entering cleaned areas. One HVAC tech walking back through a final-cleaned corridor with dusty boots re-soils the floors. One plumber adjusting a fixture after the restroom is cleaned triggers a callback. Communication with trade foremen — not just awareness — is what this section confirms.
The hazmat section protects everyone. Undisclosed hazardous materials create liability for the GC, not just the cleaning crew. The PDF includes disclosure requirements for 10 material types including lead paint, asbestos, spray-applied fireproofing, silica, mold, PCBs, and mercury-containing materials.
Once this checklist is confirmed, getting a 24-hour scoped bid on your project takes one form. Our PM reviews scope, square footage, and phase schedule and you have a number within 24 hours.