Airborne Exhaust and Waterlogged Mud
Dearborn Heights catches the backdraft from heavy industry. The local cemeteries sit in dense, poorly draining Wayne County clay. Families searching for headstone cleaning services near me usually find monuments swallowed by mud or sealed under a layer of sticky manufacturing exhaust. As a professional headstone restoration company, we physically stabilize the sinking granite first before we chemically strip the environmental pollution away.
Petroleum-Based Fallout
Airborne manufacturing fallout coats the local plots. This petroleum-based exhaust cures into a waterproof black shell on porous limestone and granite. You cannot hose it off, and scrubbing it dry just drives the oil deeper into the rock.
We rely on a specialized chemical poultice. The thick paste covers the monument and actively breaks the petroleum bond. It draws the grease out of the pores so we can wipe the raw sludge away without damaging the fragile stone underneath.
Submerged Markers and Rubber Tracks
The local clay turns into a swamp every spring. Flat flush markers lose their bearing capacity and sink rapidly. Commercial mowers smash into the sunken granite, chipping the edges and burning black tire rubber directly into the carved lettering.
We use commercial solvents to break down the melted rubber. We pry the heavy slab completely out of the mud. We dig a shallow trench and lay a deep crushed gravel foundation. The gravel drains the standing water. We reset the marker perfectly flush with the turf so the mowers clear it safely.
Ice Lifts and Tilting Bases
Waterlogged dirt freezes hard during Michigan winters. The expanding ice grabs 500-pound granite bases, lifts them out of the mud, and pitches them forward.
We never just shove a leaning block back into place. For permanent leaning headstone repair, we extract the base entirely. We dig out the compromised clay and pack a deep trench with crushed angular gravel. The ground stays dry, preventing the frost from grabbing the foundation again.
Corrosive Salt Spalling
Winter plows spray heavy salt brine across the roadside plots near Telegraph Road and Ford Road. The salt penetrates the older concrete footings. When it dries, it expands and snaps the front face of the masonry right off.
We cannot glue the broken flakes back on. We wash the corrosive salt out of the rock pores. We seal the open wound with a breathable mortar. This blocks new water from getting inside and destroying the rest of the block.
Acidic Smog and Bronze Decay
Acidic industrial air destroys flat bronze veteran markers. The protective clear coat fails, leaving the bare copper alloy to oxidize into a thick green paste.
We perform complete bronze marker restoration right at the grave. We strip the metal bare. We scrub the green rot off, apply a dark background tint, sand the letters bright, and lock the finish in with a heavy UV clear coat.
Service Logistics and Pricing
We skip the on-site estimates. For all cemetery monument maintenance, we run a flat-rate subscription model based strictly on the size and type of the marker. You check your exact cost instantly using our online configurator. You book the work, and our field crew heads to the cemetery.
- Carbon Extraction: Using poultice to pull petroleum exhaust out of porous stone.
- Raising & Leveling: Digging out wet clay and packing gravel under submerged markers.
- Foundation Repair: Patching salt-spalled concrete bases with breathable mortar.
- Bronze Restoration: Stripping and resealing oxidized veteran markers.