Rubbish removal in Darlinghurst
Darlinghurst is the corner of our patch where the buildings have personalities: deco walk-ups with no lift at all, terraces on lanes a van barely fits down, and new towers in between. Three quarters of the homes are still apartments, but here "apartment access" often means four flights of stairs and a landing that was measured for 1938 furniture.
No goods lift? That's the job, not a surcharge surprise
Half of Darlinghurst's rental stock predates the idea of a goods lift. A sofa leaving a third-floor walk-up leaves on shoulders, around a return stair, past a hundred years of plasterwork. We quote those jobs knowing that, the stairs are in the fixed price you agree before we start, not a discovery the crew makes on arrival. Corners get padded, rails get blanketed, and the deco details that make these buildings worth living in are still intact when we leave.
Between tenants, heritage edition
Vacate clearouts here have a texture the tower core doesn't: fireplaces that collected books, picture rails that collected pictures, under-stair cavities that collected everything else. The sequence is the same as any end-of-lease clearout, worked back from the inspection date, but the carrying takes longer and the care matters more. Agents who manage the deco stock know which crews they'll let into it twice.
The strip after dark
Darlinghurst's other economy runs on hospitality: cafes, bars and venues from Oxford Street through to Stanley Street. Their clearouts, a refitted dining room's old chairs, a dead glass-door fridge, the storeroom that ate five years of decisions, are commercial waste, which the council pickup won't take. We do these early morning, before the street wakes up, around your delivery windows, not through them.
Tell us the date. We'll handle the building.
Send what needs to go and when the keys go back. We'll come back with one fixed price, agreed before we lift a thing, and we'll sort the goods lift with your building manager.