Removing Historic Railroad Carbon
Ogden ran on coal for decades. The trains pumped thick smoke over the city, and it coated the cemeteries. It left a heavy black layer on the monuments.
That soot is carbon bonded to the rock. It isn't just dust. Hose water won't move it. It’s like trying to wash off spray paint. We use a chemical carbon-breaker. It penetrates that black crust and lifts the soot out of the pores. We rinse the runoff away, and the stone turns gray again. We reveal inscriptions that haven't been seen in decades.
Hard Water Calcium Scale
The city water is hard. Sprinklers hit the stones daily in the summer. The sun burns the water off, but the calcium minerals stay.
It builds a white scab over the lettering. It gets thicker every year. Chipping it off destroys the stone underneath. We use a buffered acid made specifically for cleaning stone gravestones. It dissolves the mineral bond chemically. We apply the solution. It eats the mineral crust immediately. We pressure-rinse it, and the stone is clear. No scratching, no damage.
Popped Mortar Joints
Winter here destroys cement. Water seeps into the seam where the stone meets the base. It freezes hard. That pressure blows the old cement right out of the joint.
The headstone starts to rock on its base. We scrape out the old, failed mortar. We don't use rigid cement for the repair. We use a specialized epoxy. It flexes with the stone during the freeze-thaw cycles. It keeps the joint sealed tight so water stays out for good.
Lichen on Historic Sandstone
Historic Ogden is full of soft sandstone markers. This rock acts like a sponge. It stays wet, which is exactly what lichen needs.
The lichen roots eat into the stone face and create pits. Families looking for headstone cleaning services near me often try wire brushes. That rubs the face right off the crumbling stone. We use a biocide instead. It kills the roots instantly. The growth turns to dust and washes away with a gentle rinse. We clean the stone without touching the fragile surface.
Winter Inversion Grease
The inversion traps smog in the valley. The valley smog leaves a heavy, oily layer on the granite.
Rain makes it worse. It turns that oil into a sludge that attracts dirt. The stone loses all its color. We treat it with an industrial degreaser. It cuts through the traffic film and lifts the smog residue. We strip that oily layer so the natural granite polish shines again.
Tree Root Displacement
The old trees in the city cemetery have massive root systems. They grow right under the headstones.
A root can lift a two-ton monument and tilt it over. We can't kill the tree, so we fix the stone. We lift the monument up. We build a raised gravel pad on the low side to level the stone over the root. The marker sits straight, and the tree keeps growing.
Service Costs in Ogden
Prices change based on the job. A quick granite clean is cheap. Fixing a crumbling 100-year-old sandstone marker costs more. We price based on the work needed:
- Carbon Soot Removal: Chemical stripping of historic coal smoke stains.
- Joint Repair: Replacing broken cement with flexible, weather-proof epoxy.
- Sandstone Treatment: Consolidating soft stone to stop peeling and lichen growth.
- Calcium Removal: Acidic cleaning to dissolve white irrigation scale.
We go to the plot. We identify the stone type. We check the stability. Then we give you a price.


