If you have a fire or water emergency, please call us now at (402) 370-2460

To have the optimal experience while using this site, you will need to update your browser. You may want to try one of the following alternatives:

Fire & Water - Cleanup & Restoration



Rely on Weather to be Unpredictable; Predict SERVPRO of Norfolk to be Reliable at Beating Storm Damage.

Severe thunderstorms, roof-shattering hail, and blizzards are not unknown in Madison County, Nebraska. Our supremely well-trained professionals at SERVPRO® of Norfolk have both experience and training in restoring homes from the dangerous to the (merely?) very unpleasant. At SERVPRO of Norfolk, we take our responsibilities to you seriously, so we maintain and upgrade our training in cleaning, damage remediation, and property restoration. We have professionals on-call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 52 weeks a year (no exceptions!) to respond to emergencies; we know what a crucial difference a prompt response makes. Call us at 402-370-2460 as soon as you realize the damage is beyond the grasp of nonprofessionals. We remediate damage from water, smoke and soot, microbial growth (such as mold), hail or heavy winds (roof damage, debris indoors), and any other problems that a storm drags in. Once we finish the damage remediation and the cleaning/disinfection processes, we bring in the construction and restoration crews to take care of both your home’s structure and your belongings. From roof repair through specialized dry cleaning, we are Here to Help. ®

SERVPRO of Norfolk                                                          402-370-2460

We’re here whenever you need us.

  • No job is too large
  • No job is too small
  • Certified by the Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification (IICRC)
  • Here to make the storm damage “Like it never even happened”

Storm Facts Courtesy of SERVPRO of Norfolk

  • While tornadoes are rare in the winter, only February has gone without a recorded tornado somewhere in our known weather history
  • The flash-to-bang method is how you figure out how near/far you are from a lightning strike. Count the number of seconds between a flash of lightning and the following thunderclap (or bang); divide that number by five (5). That’s how many miles you are from where the lightning struck
  • The National Weather Service recommends taking cover if the time between lightning and thunder is 30 seconds or less, which indicates that the lightning is six (6) miles away or closer
  • Lightning bolts are hotter than the sun’s surface (50,000 degrees F)
  • Lightning can (and frequently does) strike the same place more than once
  • A windstorm once tore away the goal posts in a pro football field
  • Thundersnow (thunder during a snowstorm) is more common near the great lakes than other parts of the United States, but it does occur even far from lakes

SERVPRO of Norfolk

402-370-2460