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How to fix chlorine damage to garage door, railings, blinds, door hardware?

Siobhan7
Community Newcomer

How to fix chlorine damage to garage door, railings, blinds, door hardware?

Hello, I had a house washer come to clean my house to freshen up the paint etc. It was a disaster.

 

They used excessive chlorine despite a prior conversation where I expressed concerns about any chemicals whatsoever. 

 

Apart from the death to the lawn and surrounding mature hedging/plants etc, there is damage to most metal finishes on the house. Construction was done 4 years ago so they were in excellent condition before.

 

Can anyone advise if these are possible to fix? 

 

In terms of what they are made of:

 

Garage door - Milano door from Personality Garage Doors. I think it's powder coated aluminium/aluminium composite. They have changed hands and said they can't help me with any advice.

 

External Blind - Evaya ev80. I've asked them to clarify exactly what it's made from but I'd assume it's aluminium/aluminium composite too.

 

Railings - painted with Murabond bridge paint.

 

Door hardware - Olivari superinox satin finish.

 

Any advice on how to repair gratefully received. 

 

 

 

 

Venetian exterior surfaceVenetian exterior surfaceInterior surface of the VenetianInterior surface of the VenetianGarage doorGarage door

 

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MitchellMc
Bunnings Team Member
Bunnings Team Member

Re: Help: chlorine damage to garage door, railings, venetian blind, external door hardware

Welcome to the Bunnings Workshop community @Siobhan7. It's wonderful to have you join us, and many thanks for your question about chlorine damage.

In my experience, unfortunately, damage caused by excessive chlorine to surfaces like powder-coated aluminium, painted railings, and satin-finish hardware is often irreparable. Once the chlorine has eaten into the surface, causing etching, discolouration, or corrosion, it's not something that can be restored with cleaning or simple touch-ups.

 

Given the extent of the damage and the cost likely involved in replacing items, I’d recommend contacting the cleaner who performed the work. This seems like a case where insurance will need to be involved—either through liability insurance or potentially your own home insurance, depending on the policy.


Please let me know if you have any questions.

Mitchell
 

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