top of page

One Day per Room. How an EnduraFlood customer recovered quickly after Hurricane Milton

Albert installed EnduraFlood in his home after Hurricane Ian to avoid another traumatic experience in the future. After Hurricane Helene and Milton flooded his home in 2024, he recovered within a week and a half.


Watch him tell his story.

EnduraFlood customer speaks about how he recovered from Hurricane Milton within a week and a half.

EnduraFlood's waterproof and removable drywall system allowed this customer to reduce flood damage in his house, and to recover much more quickly. Because all components are 100% waterproof, and because the panels can be removed and reinstalled without expert help, customers can simply dry out the wall, and get back to their lives within days, instead of months. Here is customer Albert in his own words:


"I just love Florida. I love everything about Florida. I like the weather. We have a dock, and we can put a boat there, and you can go to the main Caloosahatchee river in three minutes.

You can drive your boat up to the Gulf. It has golf access. I had just moved furniture here right before Hurricane Ian, and all that furniture was destroyed by hurricane Ian because it had, like, three and a half feet of water in this house. I hired a construction demolition crew. They took everything out, you know, everything under four feet.


All the drywall was taken out. Most of the furniture was thrown away. Through that process of going through all that really made me think, well, if this ever happens again, I don't want to go through this traumatic experience again.


So how can I prepare myself for it? Because the drywall is the cause of all these problems of you having to clear the whole house and destroy the kitchen cabinets. You know, it was a domino effect with a drywall, because drywalls needs to be taken out, and everything else needs to be taken out.


So that's why, after doing research, I came upon EnduraFlood and these last two hurricanes with Helene and Milton, where I got a foot and a half of water in this house, both hurricanes, I was able to get things back to normal in three weeks, whereas with Ian, it took me good year and a half to put everything in place.


Obviously took time, but once that job was done, then another hurricane hits. Then the process is very simple because everything is cut to size, and you just reuse all the boards and

you reuse all the baseboards, all the materials. So it's just a matter of taking it out of the track and seeing if there's mold or any water in the wall area. And then clean the back of the board with. With wipes, and then putting it back.


And, you know, each room here took me about a day per room, so maybe a week. So it's much, much easier process than rebuilding with drywall. I really like the look of the EnduBoard and makes it look different. With drywall, you just have one look. It's more monotonous. I actually like this look better than just having drywall, so. And the nice thing is you can paint it whichever color you want. I know now that if another hurricane hits and if I get a flood, that that's a survivable event, you know, that I'm not going to have to go in the hole financially. It just takes a reasonable amount of work to restore it to the previous condition.


After Hurricane Ian, when I made the decision to go with EnduraFlood, that was definitely the best rebuilding decision that I ever made, and that was proven by my experience with Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton."

bottom of page