A standard water damage inspection at a Daniel, UT property produces a mitigation scope: what needs to be extracted, dried, and demolished. When the mitigation company and reconstruction contractor are separate, a second assessor must visit the property — often after mitigation is already underway — to produce the reconstruction scope. This second assessment takes time, may produce scope discrepancies with the mitigation documentation, and introduces a second carrier contact. Phoenix Flood Care's inspection produces both scopes in a single visit: the WRT-certified moisture assessment and contamination classification that drives mitigation, and the preliminary reconstruction scope (what will need to be rebuilt and to what specification) documented simultaneously. Your UT carrier receives one integrated assessment document from one team. Call (833) 652-9398 now.
The preliminary reconstruction scope produced at inspection gives the UT carrier a complete project picture on day one: the total estimated project cost (mitigation plus reconstruction), the material specifications for reconstruction (matching pre-loss finish materials), and the logical connection between what was damaged (the mitigation scope) and what will be rebuilt (the reconstruction scope). Carriers who receive both scopes simultaneously can authorize the complete project rather than authorizing mitigation, waiting for close, and then reviewing a reconstruction supplement as a separate action.
Combined-scope inspection also protects against scope mismatch — the most common cause of mid-project delays in separated mitigation/reconstruction projects. When the mitigation scope and reconstruction scope are produced by two different teams at two different times, the reconstruction scope may not perfectly account for everything the mitigation scope identified: a cavity that was dried but not noted as requiring insulation replacement, a trim piece that was removed during demolition but not included in the reconstruction list. Phoenix Flood Care's single-team, single-visit combined scope eliminates these gaps because the same inspector who identifies what is damaged documents what is needed to restore it — in the same document, on the same day.
Calibrated penetrating and non-penetrating moisture meters map the moisture boundary at all affected materials and assemblies. Contamination category (1, 2, or 3) is determined from source type and duration. The moisture boundary map and contamination classification are the foundation of the mitigation scope — establishing exactly what must be dried, treated, and demolished.
Simultaneously with the moisture assessment, Phoenix Flood Care documents pre-loss material conditions: finish materials, colors, profiles, installation methods, and specifications at each affected area. This pre-loss record is the foundation of the preliminary reconstruction scope — establishing what the materials were before damage so that the reconstruction scope specifies materials that match the pre-loss condition. The documentation is completed at the initial visit, before any demolition alters the evidence of pre-loss conditions.
The combined assessment — moisture boundary and contamination classification (mitigation scope) plus pre-loss documentation and preliminary reconstruction scope — is compiled into a single document and delivered to the property owner and the UT carrier before mitigation work begins. The combined document is the project authorization basis: one document, two scopes, one authorization conversation with the carrier.