Cricket control in Boerum Hill: what to know
Boerum Hill is a landmarked historic district of exceptionally well-preserved 19th-century Greek Revival and Italianate brownstone and brick row houses, sitting between Downtown Brooklyn, Cobble Hill and Gowanus. Like Park Slope, its housing stock is attached — shared party walls, original timber floor joists and basement garden apartments — so rodents, cockroaches and ants travel between adjoining homes through the building fabric itself, not just a single unit's own foundation.
The Smith Street and Atlantic Avenue restaurant and retail corridors keep food-source pressure high on the surrounding residential blocks year-round, sustaining cockroach and rodent activity through the colder months. Basement and garden-level units in these century-old row houses are prone to large 'water bugs' rising from old drains and to mice moving in from the commercial strips.
Much of the original or partially renovated masonry on Boerum Hill's protected blocks carries mortar gaps, deteriorated sill plates and unsealed utility penetrations — the entry conditions a fully modern building doesn't have, and the reason single-unit treatments here often need to account for the shared structure next door.
Signs you need cricket control
- Chirping at night (house crickets) coming from basements or walls
- Humpbacked, long-legged crickets jumping in basements, cellars or bathrooms
- Holes or damage in stored fabric, cardboard or paper in basement storage
- Crickets concentrated in damp, dark ground-floor and below-grade areas
How we treat cricket control in Boerum Hill
Crickets — especially the humpbacked camel cricket (often called a 'spider cricket' or 'cave cricket') — are a common but under-treated NYC pest. They thrive in the damp basements, cellars, crawl spaces and ground-floor units that older New York buildings have in abundance, and their chirping and jumping make them especially unwelcome indoors.
Camel crickets don't chirp but they jump erratically when disturbed and feed on fabric, cardboard and stored items in basements. House crickets are drawn to warmth and light. Both signal a moisture and entry-point problem, which is why treatment that ignores the underlying conditions never holds.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Boerum Hill and the surrounding Brooklyn area — including Smith Street, Atlantic Avenue, State Street, Dean Street, Hoyt Street — across ZIP codes 11217, 11201.