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EMERGENCY 24/7
IICRC Certified · Veteran Owned · OKC Metro

This Is My Town. Literally.

4D Restoration is headquartered in Edmond. I don't “serve” this city — I live here, work here, and drive these streets every day.

IICRC Certified · Veteran-Owned · Based at 615 Evergreen Street, Edmond

24/7 EMERGENCY FREE ASSESSMENT
◆ HOME_BASE_REPORT

My Shop Is on Evergreen Street. That's Not a Metaphor.

Most restoration companies "serve" Edmond the way a cable company "serves" you — your zip code is in their system. They dispatch from wherever. A tech shows up who couldn't tell you the difference between Coffee Creek and Spring Creek if his GPS died.

I'm at 615 Evergreen Street. I eat lunch at Around The Corner on Broadway — the one that's been there since 1951. I take my kids to Mitch Park. I know which neighborhoods flood when the spring storms roll through, and I know that the houses in Oak Tree have different problems than the houses in Chimney Hill. Not because I read about it. Because I've dried them.

When I founded 4D Restoration in January 2024, I put the headquarters in Edmond on purpose. I didn't pick OKC for the bigger market. I didn't pick Norman for the university traffic. I picked my own neighborhood — because when your name is on the truck, your neighbors are your first accountability check.

◆ THREAT_ANALYSIS

I Know What Edmond Weather Does to Edmond Houses.

Every spring, the same pattern: Gulf moisture pushes north, humidity hits 80% by 6 AM, and the thunderstorms start stacking up by afternoon. Edmond gets roughly 36 to 40 inches of precipitation a year, and May dumps the most — about 5.6 inches on average. That's not spread out gently. That's concentrated into storms that flood the intersection at 15th and Kelly and back up the creek drains along Coffee Creek and Spring Creek.

Then there's tornado season. In May 1986, an F3 tracked through Edmond — 39 homes destroyed, 171 damaged, Edmond Memorial High School hit. In May 2013, an EF3 crossed I-35 near Covell and tore through homes by Lake Arcadia. In March 2008, a tornado ripped through Valencia and shredded roofs off houses. These aren't ancient history. These are events that shaped the neighborhoods I work in today.

And the ice storms. October 2020 coated Edmond in a layer of ice thick enough to bring down mature oaks and take out power for over 9,000 customers. December 2007 was worse — over an inch of ice, weeks without power for some. February 2021 dropped temperatures to negative ten. Pipes burst in attics all over Edmond. I was running calls nonstop.

I don't just restore houses after storms. I understand which storm creates which damage pattern. An ice storm doesn't cause the same problem as a hailstorm. A pipe burst from a deep freeze isn't the same job as a pipe burst from failed supply lines. Knowing the cause changes the restoration plan. And I know the causes here because they happen to my own city.

◆ STRUCTURAL_INTEL

I Know What's Behind the Drywall.

The median construction year for an Edmond home is 1992. But that average hides a lot of range. You've got original downtown homes from the early 1900s — pier-and-beam foundations, plaster walls, single-pane windows, knob-and-tube wiring in some cases. Then you've got the big wave of 1970s and 1980s construction — slab-on-grade, copper supply lines that are starting to show their age, original HVAC systems that leak condensation into places nobody checks.

Out east in Iron Horse Ranch, the homes are newer custom builds on large lots — tight building envelopes, spray-foam insulation, radiant barrier in the attic. Good for energy efficiency. Bad when a small roof leak goes undetected, because that moisture gets trapped in a sealed system and you've got mold inside the wall cavity before anyone smells it.

And then there's Oak Tree. Luxury homes, large footprints, mature tree canopy overhead. Beautiful — until an ice storm drops a limb through the roof. Or until hail the size of golfballs shreds the architectural shingles. I've worked Oak Tree after storms. The damage is real and the square footage makes the job bigger. But the process is the same: assess, contain, document, restore.

This matters because every house is a system. And when a system fails, you need someone who understands how it was built. Not just someone with a pump and a dehumidifier.

IICRC_CERTIFIED
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FREE_ASSESSMENT

If you're in Edmond and you've got water in your house right now — stop reading. Call me.

405-896-9088

I'm probably less than 15 minutes away. This is my city. I don't need GPS to find you.

Usually on-site within 15–30 minutes in Edmond.

BROADCAST

Water In Your Edmond Home? I'm Close.

24/7 Emergency Response · Edmond Headquartered

◆ KNOWLEDGE_BASE

Edmond Restoration Questions

4d-restoration — bash — 80×24
admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=01 "How fast can you get to my Edmond home in an emergency?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [01] ---

I'm based in Edmond. 615 Evergreen Street. Depending on where you are in the city, I'm usually on-site in 15 to 30 minutes. If you're near Coffee Creek and I'm near downtown, add ten. But I'm not driving from south OKC or the other side of the metro — I'm already here.

admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=02 "Do Edmond homes have specific water damage risks I should know about?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [02] ---

Yes. Homes built in the 1970s and '80s — which is most of Edmond's housing stock — have copper supply lines that are aging. Some are close to 50 years old. Attic-run plumbing in newer construction is also vulnerable during deep freezes. And every home on clay soil in Edmond deals with expansion and contraction that can shift foundations and crack slabs, creating new moisture pathways over time.

admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=03 "I think I have mold but I'm not sure. Will you come look for free?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [03] ---

Yes. I'll come to your Edmond home, do a visual and moisture assessment, and tell you what I find — no charge. If it's mold, I'll explain the scope and cost. If it's not, I'll tell you that too. No sales pitch either way.

admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=04 "What happens if my Edmond house floods during a spring storm?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [04] ---

Call me immediately. I'll get there fast — I know the flood-prone zones: near 15th and Kelly, along Coffee Creek, Spring Creek corridors, the railroad underpasses. Once I arrive, I extract standing water, set up commercial drying equipment, and start documenting for your insurance the same day. Speed matters — mold can start within 48 hours.

admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=05 "Do you deal with ice storm damage?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [05] ---

Absolutely. I was running jobs nonstop during the October 2020 ice storm and the February 2021 deep freeze. Ice storms create a specific pattern: tree damage to roofs, water intrusion from ice dams, burst pipes from sub-zero temperatures, and then mold if the water isn't dried properly. I handle all of it — from emergency tarping to full structural drying.

admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=06 "How is 4D Restoration different from the bigger franchise companies?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [06] ---

I live in Edmond. My office is in Edmond. When I say I know your neighborhood, I mean I've driven your streets, dried homes on your foundations, and worked through the same storms that hit your house. A franchise dispatches from a call center. I answer my own phone. My rates come from Xactimate — the same software your adjuster uses — and I don't have franchise fees, corporate overhead, or a regional VP in my pricing.

admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=07 "My insurance company recommended a different contractor. Do I have to use them?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [07] ---

No. Oklahoma law gives you the right to choose your own contractor. Your insurance company can suggest a "preferred vendor," but they cannot require you to use one. I work with every major insurance carrier and document to IICRC standards using Xactimate. No adjuster has ever rejected my documentation.

admin@4d : ~/faq $
query --id=08 "Do you handle both residential and commercial work in Edmond?" ▶ ENTER
--- OUTPUT [08] ---

Both. I've worked commercial spaces — offices, retail, churches, schools — across Edmond. The process scales up but the discipline stays the same: assess, contain, document, restore. If you're a property manager or business owner, same deal — I'll come look at it and give you a straight answer.

admin@4d : ~/faq $

Edmond Is Home. That's Why I Built 4D Here.

I'm Phil Sheridan. My address is 615 Evergreen Street, Edmond, OK 73003. My phone number is 405-896-9088. I founded 4D Restoration because I got tired of watching homeowners get average work at emergency prices — and I decided to build something I'd stake my name on, starting in my own neighborhood.