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Window Cleaning

Water-fed poles and squeegee kits for commercial window work. Pure Water Power filtration runs the pole side; the squeegee side covers ground-floor detail and storefronts. Pick by access height, not by brand loyalty.

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Window Cleaning Equipment for Professional and Commercial Use

Water-Fed Poles vs. Squeegee Systems: Which Covers Your Work

The core decision in commercial window cleaning equipment comes down to whether chemical-free results at height or precise manual control at ground level better fits the contracts you run. Water-fed pole systems from Pure Water Power use purified water at 0 parts per million total dissolved solids, which dries spot-free without wipers or chemicals. That matters for facility managers who need glass cleaned on occupied buildings where chemical runoff onto entry plazas or parked vehicles is a liability, and it matters for contractors working facades that would require scaffolding under traditional methods.

Squeegee channel systems give professional cleaners tactile control on interior glass, storefront applications, and any surface where the operator can stand safely at arm's reach. Brass, stainless, and hard-anodized aluminum channels hold edges longer under daily commercial use than consumer-grade aluminum, and interchangeable rubber grades let one handle cover cold winter glass and sun-heated summer panes on the same route. Most commercial window cleaning operations run both systems depending on the service type and building configuration.

Pure Water Technology and High-Rise Reach Without Lifts

Water-fed pole systems have displaced aerial lifts on a large share of mid-rise commercial window contracts over the past decade. The operational math is straightforward: a reach-and-wash pole system with a backpack or trolley-mounted pure water tank eliminates the daily cost of renting and operating a lift on buildings up to five or six stories, cuts setup time from hours to minutes, and lets a two-person crew cover square footage that would require a larger team on traditional equipment.

The chemistry behind the result is equally practical. Tap water carries calcium, magnesium, chlorine, and silica that leave residue as water evaporates on glass. Deionization and reverse osmosis systems strip those minerals before the water reaches the brush head, so the final rinse dries without spotting. OSHA guidelines on window washing and elevated work cover fall protection requirements for exterior cleaning operations, which facility managers and building services contractors reference when evaluating whether pole systems or aerial methods apply to a given facade height. For interior commercial glass, the EPA indoor air quality framework notes that chemical-free cleaning methods reduce volatile organic compound exposure in occupied spaces, a consideration relevant to school districts, healthcare facilities, and office building service contracts.

Related: Floor Care Equipment · Commercial Vacuums · Floor Sweepers

Selecting the Right Equipment for Your Contract Mix

Professional window cleaning equipment purchasing decisions hinge on the building types in your current contract book and the ones you want to add. A contractor whose work is primarily ground-level retail storefronts needs a different equipment mix than one targeting corporate campuses with four-story glazed facades. Water-fed pole packages at varying reach lengths, paired with a DI vessel or full RO-DI system depending on local water hardness, cover the mid-rise exterior segment. A complete squeegee kit with professional squeegee channels, scrubbers, and detail tools handles interior and storefront work.

Route efficiency also depends on equipment durability. Poles, brush heads, and hose fittings that fail mid-contract cost more in lost time than any upfront price differential. Commercial-grade aluminum and carbon fiber pole sections, brass fittings, and Unger or Ettore-compatible channel systems hold up across daily commercial use in ways that consumer-tier equipment does not. Investing in the right specification on the front end avoids the replacement cycle that erodes margin on high-frequency service contracts.

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