The Gateway to NYC — and to NYC's pest problems. Our NJDEP-licensed technicians bring 50+ years of NYC pest control discipline to Fort Lee — same rigor, same documentation, same results.
Fort Lee sits right at the foot of the George Washington Bridge. The same urban density that makes it a desirable address also creates the conditions that drive pest pressure. We handle high-rises in Manhattan every week. Fort Lee's towers are just a bridge away.
Our Bergen County service is built on the same foundation as our NYC operations: thorough inspection, documented IPM, and follow-through that protects you from the next inspection — not just the last one.
Every service visit generates a detailed log accessible through our 24/7 client portal. Whether you're a property manager, restaurant operator, or building owner, your compliance documentation is always available when you need it.
Deploy a Free AssessmentGet a free site assessment from a team that has handled tougher problems than yours. 50+ years. NYC's most demanding clients. Now serving Fort Lee.
Fort Lee's Main Street and Central Avenue Korean restaurant corridor — the largest concentration of Korean food service establishments outside of Flushing in the tri-state area — creates a specific pest control environment that requires understanding of Korean kitchen operations. These restaurants operate with extended hours, high-volume prep, and specific food storage patterns that create cockroach and rodent pressure different from standard American food service. The DOH-equivalent in NJ — the Bergen County Division of Health — inspects these establishments with increasing frequency, and a pest-related critical violation can trigger the same economic consequences as a NYC Grade C.
Fort Lee's high-rise residential corridor along the Palisades — the luxury towers on Hudson Terrace, Bruce Reynolds Boulevard, and the streets parallel to the George Washington Bridge approach — creates a bed bug environment driven by the constant commuter traffic between Manhattan and Bergen County. Residents commuting daily on the GWB, PATH, and Hudson Line create the same bed bug introduction risk as NYC residential buildings, without the benefit of NYC's established rapid-response exterminator infrastructure. Broadway's Fort Lee residential programs include routine bed bug detection and rapid heat treatment deployment equivalent to our NYC hotel protocols.
The George Washington Bridge approach on the New Jersey side — the Lemoine Avenue and Fort Lee Road commercial corridor immediately west of the bridge — generates pest pressure from the continuous heavy truck traffic, loading docks, and food service infrastructure serving the GWB plaza facilities. Commercial and residential properties within two blocks of the bridge approach on the NJ side experience rodent pressure that tracks directly to the below-grade infrastructure of the bridge's NJ anchorage. This is a persistent, infrastructure-driven pressure that requires ongoing exclusion maintenance.
// Fort Lee — Korean Restaurant Corridor, GWB Gateway
Fort Lee's Main Street and Center Avenue restaurant corridor — particularly the concentration of Korean restaurants, barbecue houses, and Korean-owned food businesses that has made Fort Lee one of the most active Korean dining destinations in the New York metro area — creates food service pest pressure equivalent to Manhattan's restaurant corridors, in buildings operating under NJ DOH inspection requirements. The German cockroach strains in Fort Lee's Korean restaurant kitchens have developed the same treatment resistance patterns we address in Flushing's Korean and Chinese restaurant environments — requiring the rotation-based IPM protocols that standard NJ exterminators typically do not offer. We bring the same Flushing-developed resistance protocols across the bridge to Fort Lee.
Fort Lee's high-rise residential towers — the densely built apartment buildings that overlook the Hudson from the Palisades — create the same building-wide pest management challenges as Manhattan's luxury residential market. These buildings' managing agents and boards expect the same documentation standards as Manhattan co-op management, and Broadway's client portal provides exactly that format for NJ residential portfolios.
// Fort Lee — What We Know From Working Here
Fort Lee is the gateway to Bergen County from New York City — the last municipality before the George Washington Bridge, with the Bridge's approach infrastructure dominating the neighborhood's western edge. The GWB approach corridors and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey infrastructure create rodent pressure from maintenance facilities and below-grade infrastructure that affects the commercial and residential buildings in the blocks immediately surrounding the bridge approach. Main Street in Fort Lee is the Korean restaurant corridor that has become one of Bergen County's most active food service streets — Korean barbecue restaurants, Korean seafood, and the full range of Korean cuisine in a concentrated stretch that operates at high volume, generating the same cockroach pressure as comparable corridors in Flushing. Fort Lee's high-rise residential towers — the luxury apartment buildings that line the Palisades cliffs above the Hudson — create a co-op and condo management market that requires the same documentation standards as Manhattan's Upper West Side. Our NJDEP-licensed technicians service all of Fort Lee's property types with programs built for NJ DOH compliance standards.