Ejector Pit Odor Treatment in Long Island
Below-grade ejector pits are the #1 hidden source of building-wide sewer odor. We treat the pit, the vent, and the discharge — not just the smell in the lobby. Built for country clubs, senior living campuses, and municipal pump stations across Nassau and Suffolk.
Why Long Island properties need this
Long Island runs on private wells, private septic, and a patchwork of municipal pump stations — which means one bad grease slug at a country club or one silted lift station can take out an entire community's water quality perception. We manage programs across both counties on the same visit cadence.
- Country clubs
- Senior living
- Municipal pump stations
- Hospitals
- Beach clubs
What we solve for Long Island properties
The problems we're brought in to fix, across Nassau County, Suffolk County, Garden City, Huntington, and the rest of Long Island.
- Sewer odor in lobbies, back-of-house, and lower-level amenities
- Complaints that spike after quiet periods (holidays, off-season)
- Pits that were never on any maintenance schedule
- Vac-truck cleanouts that fix it for a week and then it returns
"One monthly visit covers our entire campus. We haven't had a member complaint in over a year."
How the ejector pit treatment program runs in Long Island
- Step 01
Pit audit — grease cap depth, H₂S reading, vent stack check
- Step 02
Bio-enzymatic dosing program on a monthly schedule
- Step 03
Foaming applications on the walls and float chamber
- Step 04
Written service log with pit condition photos every visit
What we deploy
Ejector pit bio program
Live bacteria that digest the grease cap and reduce H₂S at the source.
Vent-side neutralization
Odor-counteractant on the vent path so any residual gas doesn't reach occupied space.
Ejector Pit Treatment in Long Island — FAQ
Why is the ejector pit the hidden culprit?
Because most buildings don't know it's there. Ejector pits sit below the sewer line, collect everything from the lower-level fixtures, and generate H₂S continuously — but they usually aren't on any maintenance calendar until we find them during the audit.
Why does the odor come back after a vac-truck cleanout?
A one-time cleanout removes accumulated solids but doesn't stop the bacterial process that creates the odor. Within days, biofilm re-establishes and H₂S returns. A monthly bio-dosing program keeps the pit from re-generating odor between cleanouts.
Do we need to shut down the pit for service?
No. Dosing and foaming happen with the pit fully operational. There's no downtime.
Do you service Long Island on a regular schedule?
Yes — weekly routes across nassau & suffolk. We route Long Island weekly for existing accounts and offer same-week site walks for new properties across Nassau County, Suffolk County, Garden City and the rest of Long Island.
What types of Long Island properties do you work with for ejector pit treatment?
The ejector pit treatment program in Long Island is running in country clubs, senior living, municipal pump stations, and across the property types most common to the market. If your property type isn't listed, most programs adapt without any changes to scope.
More on ejector pit treatment
Ejector Pit Treatment in other markets
- Manhattan
- Brooklyn
- Queens
- The Bronx
- Staten Island
- Westchester County
- Jersey City
- Hoboken
- Newark
- North Jersey
- Central Jersey
- South Jersey
- Jersey Shore
- Stamford
- Greenwich
- Fairfield County
- New Haven
- Hartford
- Philadelphia
- Pittsburgh
- Philadelphia Main Line
- Boston
- Cambridge
- Washington, DC
- Baltimore
- Miami
- Chicago
Other services in Long Island
Ready to fix ejector pit treatment at your Long Island property?
Book a site walk. We'll audit the space, give you a scope, and quote a monthly program.
