4D Logo 4D
EMERGENCY 24/7
IICRC Certified · Veteran Owned · OKC Metro

Your Home.
Your Emergency.
My Problem Now.

I answer my phone. Day or night. Let's get your house back.

Phil Sheridan · IICRC Certified · Army Veteran · Edmond, OK

24/7 EMERGENCY FREE ASSESSMENT

If you're reading this page right now, something has gone wrong. You're tired, you're stressed, and you just want a human to tell you it's fixable.

I'm that human. My name is Phil Sheridan. I run 4D Restoration out of Edmond.

Whatever it is — your water heater just let go, there's sewage coming up through the floor drain, you walked downstairs after a storm and found three inches of water in the den — it's fixable. All of it. It's wet. Wet is physics. I can fix physics.

I've done this more times than I can count across Edmond and OKC. I'm not guessing. I'm not going to show up and Google your problem in the driveway. I'm going to show up with a truck full of equipment and a plan that starts before I hang up the phone.

◆ DISPATCH PROTOCOL

Here's How the Next 60 Minutes Go.

01

[ You call. I pick up. ]

Same number on this page. Same voice that shows up at your door. While we're on the phone, I'm going to walk you through exactly what to do right now — where to find the water shut-off, what to move off the floor, what to leave alone. You're not waiting for a dispatcher to relay a message. You're talking to the person who's about to fix this.

02

[ I show up with the truck. ]

I'm usually on-site within 60 minutes. The truck is already loaded — industrial air movers, dehumidifiers that pull moisture out of the air all day, HEPA air scrubbers, a thermal camera that shows me where the water went that you can't see. I don't walk in and eyeball it. I point instruments at your walls and your instruments don't lie.

03

[ You go take care of your family. I start working. ]

I set up containment if I need it. I start extraction. I begin drying. And I start building the evidence file your insurance company is going to need — thermal images, moisture readings, photos of every surface the water touched. I document everything like it's going to court, because sometimes with adjusters, it basically is.

BROADCAST

I pick up. Even when I shouldn't.

24/7 Emergency Response — Under 60 Minutes

◆ PERSONNEL FILE

Not a Franchise. Not a Call Center. Just Phil.

PHIL_SHERIDAN // OWNER_OPERATOR CLASS_A

I'm a service-disabled veteran. Six years in the Army, including a deployment to Afghanistan in 2011. I started 4D Restoration on January 3rd, 2024, because I got tired of watching restoration companies charge emergency fees for a business that is, by definition, always an emergency. Here's more about me.

My brother works with me. He thinks my OSHA protocols are excessive. He's wrong. We're IICRC certified. I carry liability and workers' comp insurance. And I have a confession — I spent 45 minutes yesterday taping off a containment barrier because one corner looked sloppy. Nobody would have seen it but me. But I would have known. And that kind of thing keeps me up at night.

If your problem is a damp spot under the kitchen sink and a few towels will handle it, I'll tell you that. For free. On the phone. I'd rather lose the job than take your money for something you don't need. I have to see you at Albertsons. That keeps me honest. Don't take my word for it — read what my customers say.

◆ INTEL DATABASE

Questions You're Probably Thinking.

4d-restoration — bash — 80×24
admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=01 "Should I wait until morning to deal with this?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [01] ---

You can. But here's what the water is doing while you sleep: it's following gravity down through your subfloor, and then it does something annoying — it starts going sideways and up through capillary action. The water on your kitchen floor right now is becoming a problem inside your walls by morning. Five years from now, your home inspector shines a flashlight under the house and finds rot where there should be clean wood. I'd rather come tonight and <a href='/services/water-damage/structural-drying/'>start drying it now</a>.

admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=02 "What do I do right now while I'm waiting for you?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [02] ---

If it's a pipe, find the shut-off valve and turn it off. Under the sink, behind the toilet, or at the main by the meter. If it's a water heater, there's a valve on the cold water line feeding it — turn that one. If it's sewage, don't touch it. Don't try to clean it up. <a href='/services/water-damage/sewage-cleanup/'>Biological contamination</a> needs proper PPE and antimicrobials, not paper towels. Call me. I'll walk you through everything else on the phone.

admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=03 "IS MY HOUSE RUINED?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [03] ---

Unless an asteroid hits it, no. Your house is wet. Wood gets wet, wood gets dry. Structures are tougher than most people think. I'm here to help the wood remember how to be dry. That sounds like a weird sentence, and it is, but it's also literally my job description.

admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=04 "I'm afraid to call my insurance company." ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [04] ---

Don't be. But call me first. Here's why — adjusters have a playbook. They want to pay as little as possible. I have a different playbook. It's physics and documentation. When your adjuster tries to deny coverage for a tear-out, I show them thermal imaging and the IICRC S500 standard that says the material has to go. I don't argue. I just bury them in evidence until they stop fighting.

admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=05 "How long until my house is normal again?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [05] ---

Depends on what we find. A contained leak from a supply line might be three days of drying. A full first-floor flood after a storm could be five or more. I take readings every day — not when I feel like it, on a schedule — until the numbers say it's dry. Not "probably dry." Not "feels dry." The number on the meter matches what your walls read when they were built. That's when the fans come out. Not before.

admin@4d : ~/faq $

You're going to sleep tonight. It's going to be loud — the fans and dehumidifiers aren't quiet. But that noise is the sound of thousands of gallons of water leaving your home. Tomorrow, you'll wake up and your house will be a little bit drier than it was today. And the day after that, drier still. And eventually, the fans go silent, the equipment comes out, and all you hear is your house being a house again.

That's what I do. I make the noise that leads to the quiet.

BROADCAST

Call 405-896-9088

I make the noise that leads to the quiet.

◆ EMERGENCY DISPATCH

Something Happening Right Now?

> DISPATCH_DIRECT _

Same number. Same Phil. Call or text — I respond to both.