An Older Bloomingdale Home Hides Buildup a Regular Clean Walks Right Past
Bloomingdale started going up in 1979, and nearly 4,000 homes were finished by 1989. The community kept filling in through the early 2000s, with sections like Bloomingdale Cove built between 1996 and 2004. Add it up and most of the roughly 5,200 single-family homes spread across these 32 subdivisions are now 25 to 45 years old. That history shows up in ways you stop noticing after living with them: grout lines that drifted from white to gray, an oven that has cooked a lot of dinners, and cabinet fronts off Bell Shoals Road that carry a faint film of cooking grease no spray-and-wipe ever cut through.
A deep clean is built for exactly this. It is not the floors and counters you see every day. It is the inside of the refrigerator nobody has emptied since the last move, the baseboards running the length of a 1990s ranch hallway, the ceiling fan blades in three or four bedrooms, and the sliding glass door track off the lanai that has collected oak debris and sand. In a home that has been lived in this long, the difference after a deep clean is the kind you can smell when you walk back in the door.
Plenty of Bloomingdale homeowners use this visit as a starting point before they switch to recurring cleaning in Bloomingdale. Others book one or two a year on top of regular service. Either way, an older home needs the reset more than a brand-new build does, and that is the whole reason this service exists.