Commercial Pest Control · Indianapolis Metro

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Commercial Pest Control · Indianapolis Metro

Pest Control Built for Government Facilities

Courthouse, city/county admin, public works, and historic government building pest programs. Low-toxicity for public spaces, DNR-compliant protected-species work, public-records-grade documentation, and RFP-ready proposal formats for municipal and county purchasing processes.

  • Public-Records-Grade Documentation
  • DNR-Compliant Historic Work
  • Aprehend® Certified
  • 100% Commercial Focus
Government Buildings — ProTech Pest Control
Government facility · Indianapolis
Built For Government

Government buildings are the hardest pest environment to solve without creating a second problem.

The Indiana Statehouse. The Indianapolis City-County Building. The Marion County courthouse complex, Hamilton County Government Center, Hendricks County Government Center, Johnson County Courthouse on the Franklin square. County administration buildings, township government offices, public-works facilities, and water/wastewater operations. These are high-traffic public spaces, often in buildings that are 50 to 130 years old, held to a completely different documentation standard than private-sector commercial — because every service record can be pulled as a public record, and because a pesticide application in a public lobby can become a city council agenda item if it's handled wrong.

ProTech runs pest programs for municipal and county facilities across the Indianapolis metro. Courthouse buildings with archived document storage going back a century. Public-works facilities with loading docks, fleet maintenance bays, and salt-and-sand barns. Historic county-seat buildings with bat colonies in attic spaces that require Indiana DNR-coordinated exclusion. Pigeon populations roosting on stone cornices of downtown buildings. City-hall complexes with food service in-house. Each facility carries regulatory scrutiny and public-accountability expectations that go beyond what a private office building ever faces.

We're a small, commercial-only, owner-operated team — which works well for government procurement. Clean licensing and insurance documentation, RFP-compatible proposal format, public-records-grade service reporting, and a single point of contact who knows your facility rather than a rotating roster of regional reps. Our service records are built to survive a public-records request, an auditor review, or a council committee hearing — because in government work, they frequently have to.

15+
Years servicing Indy-metro commercial buildings
100%
Commercial focus — never residential
0
Subcontractors — all service is in-house
Government Facility Types We Service

Every municipal and public-sector facility format across the Indianapolis metro.

Courthouses, city-county admin buildings, public works, historic government buildings, fleet and maintenance facilities, and specialty public-sector operations.

County Courthouses & Judicial Centers

Marion County courthouse complex, Hamilton County Government Center, Johnson County courthouse on the Franklin square, Hendricks County Government Center, Madison County courthouse, Boone County courthouse. High public traffic, secure document storage, and courtroom spaces requiring discretion-first service.

City-County Admin Buildings

Indianapolis City-County Building, suburban city halls (Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Greenwood, Westfield, Zionsville, Brownsburg), and town halls across the metro. Mixed-use: public-facing lobbies, secure offices, council chambers, records divisions.

Historic Government Buildings

Indiana Statehouse, historic county-seat buildings, landmark township halls. Preservation-sensitive service, bat and bird exclusion coordinated with historic-preservation and DNR requirements.

Public Works & Fleet Facilities

Street/road departments, fleet maintenance garages, salt and sand barns, sign shops, vehicle storage yards. Rodent programs, loading-dock exclusion, and stored-product monitoring in parts/supplies storage.

Water & Wastewater Facilities

Municipal water treatment plants, wastewater lift stations, and water-utility admin buildings. Specialty pest pressure around water-handling infrastructure, chemical storage, and below-grade operations.

Parks & Recreation Facilities

Parks department admin, community centers, recreation centers, park-shelter complexes, and pool/aquatic-center facilities. Stinging-insect programs for outdoor event space, rodent programs for concession operations.

Libraries (Public)

Indianapolis Public Library branches, county library systems, and township library facilities. Book-storage pest monitoring (silverfish, booklice, carpet beetle), meeting-room and lobby programs.

Transit & Airport-Adjacent Municipal

IndyGo facilities, transit maintenance garages, and municipally-operated airport-adjacent buildings. Commercial-fleet pest pressure with municipal procurement and documentation requirements.

Another public-sector facility type we didn't list?

If it's a city, county, township, or special-district facility in the Indianapolis metro — animal shelters, coroner facilities, emergency-operations centers, jail-adjacent admin, voter-registration offices, health department clinics — we build pest programs for it. Tell us what facility you operate and what your procurement process looks like.

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Services for Government Facilities

Every pest service an Indianapolis-metro government building actually needs.

Low-toxicity, public-space-appropriate programs with documentation built to survive public-records requests, auditor review, and council committee scrutiny.

Commercial Cockroach Control for commercial facilities

Low-toxicity gel baiting in food-service areas, break rooms, and janitorial spaces. Never broadcast in public lobbies or courtrooms.

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Commercial Fly Control services

Cluster-fly management in historic-building attics, cafeteria/cafe fly programs, drain-fly diagnostics in public restroom drain lines, and exterior fly pressure around dumpster corrals.

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Commercial Rodent Control

Document/archive storage monitoring, tamper-resistant exterior bait stations, loading-dock exclusion for public works, and interior snap-trap monitoring in mechanical spaces.

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Commercial integrated pest management (ipm)

Low-toxicity, threshold-based, prevention-first programs appropriate for public spaces, historic buildings, and facilities with vulnerable-population traffic.

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Commercial Ant Control services

Odorous house ant, carpenter ant, and pavement ant pressure — non-repellent bait placement in service areas, never broadcast in public-facing lobbies or workspace.

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Commercial stored product pest control

Archive and document-storage pest monitoring (silverfish, booklice, carpet beetle, rodent-adjacent stored-product pests), library collection monitoring, and supply-storage programs.

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Sanitation & Prevention Audits for commercial facilities

Historic-building envelope exclusion assessment, exterior cornice and roofline bird-pressure surveys, bat-access-point identification (DNR-coordinated), and pre-season walkthroughs.

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Emergency Pest Response for commercial facilities

Active pest activity in a public-facing lobby, courtroom, or council-chamber space. Priority dispatch with documentation suitable for public-records disclosure.

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Commercial commercial general pest control

Recurring monthly or quarterly monitoring with public-records-grade documentation, RFP-compatible reporting format, and consolidated multi-facility rollups for county-level portfolios.

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Pest Pressures in Government Buildings

What Indianapolis-metro public-sector facilities actually face.

Regional pest patterns across courthouses, city-county admin, public works, historic buildings, and specialty municipal operations — what we see on service calls, by pressure type and source.

Overwintering Pests (Stink Bugs, Cluster Flies, Ladybugs)
High (Seasonal)
South/west-facing windows of historic buildings, attic spaces, wall voids

The #1 government-building pest complaint. The Indiana Statehouse, historic county courthouses, and older city halls with original single-pane windows see heavy overwintering-pest accumulation September-November and warm-day emergence February-March. Dead flies on courtroom windowsills and stink bugs crawling marble lobby walls are visible public-perception issues. Late-August exterior perimeter exclusion is the prevention play.

Archive & Document Storage Rodents
High
Records rooms, archive storage, basement document vaults, sub-basement utility spaces

Long-term document storage in courthouse basements and county records facilities draws commensal rodents — mice especially. Paper-based records are both shelter material and, with enough time, substrate for chewing activity that damages irreplaceable public records. Tamper-resistant locked stations, interior snap-trap monitoring, and exclusion at foundation and utility-penetration points are non-negotiable.

Pigeons & Roosting Birds
Medium-High (Specialty)
Exterior cornices, window ledges, roofline parapets, courthouse columns and pediments

Pigeon roosting on the stone cornices of downtown Indianapolis government buildings, historic courthouses, and the Statehouse is a highly visible aesthetic problem (droppings on sidewalks, columns, and entry steps) and a structural one (uric acid corrosion of limestone and sandstone). Bird netting, spikes, ledge modification, and ectoparasite treatment — coordinated with historic-preservation requirements.

Bats in Historic Attics
Medium (Specialty)
Attic spaces, cupolas, clock towers, and dome interiors of historic government buildings

Indiana bats, big brown bats, and little brown bats colonize historic government-building attic spaces — the Statehouse, county courthouses, historic township halls. These are Indiana protected species. Exclusion requires Indiana Department of Natural Resources consultation and timing outside maternity season (May-July). Guano accumulation creates histoplasmosis exposure risk for facility staff that requires proper PPE and protocol.

Commensal Rodents (Public Works & Fleet)
Medium-High
Fleet maintenance garages, salt/sand barns, parts storage, loading docks

Public-works facilities have commercial-grade rodent pressure — open bays, loading docks, parts storage, break rooms with food activity, and adjacent salt/sand storage that provides nesting substrate. Exterior tamper-resistant stations, loading-dock gap exclusion, and interior monitoring around equipment storage resolve long-standing pressure.

Ants (Odorous House, Carpenter, Pavement)
Medium
Break rooms, cafe/cafeteria areas, historic-building wall voids, exterior entries

Odorous house ants surge April-May around break-room coffee stations and trash. Carpenter ants are a structural concern in older buildings with moisture-compromised framing — relevant in historic courthouses where roof or parapet leaks have created moisture-damaged wood.

Silverfish, Booklice & Archive Pests
Medium (Specialty)
Document archives, library collections, records storage, basement file rooms

High-humidity basement archives and document storage draw silverfish, booklice, and psocids — all of which feed on paper, binding glue, and cellulose starch. Humidity control and sticky-card monitoring are the IPM-compliant approach; chemical treatment in an archive is almost never the right call.

Public-Space Stinging Insects
High (Seasonal)
Building entries, plaza landscaping, parks facilities, outdoor event spaces

Wasps and yellowjackets in high-public-traffic entries — courthouse steps, city-hall plazas, parks-department event spaces — are a public-safety issue. Late-summer activity spikes especially around outdoor public events, ceremonies, and high-visitor-count days. Priority-response treatment with low-toxicity products in public-space settings.

Government Buildings Pest Calendar

Government-building pest pressure in the Indianapolis metro follows the building stock — historic facilities have heavy overwintering and bat/bird pressure, modern admin buildings have cafeteria and office-ant pressure, public works has year-round rodent pressure. We schedule frequency around your operation (courthouse term calendar, public-meeting schedule, fleet-operations cycle) and document each visit to public-records-grade standards.

Regulatory, Procurement & Public Records

Documentation built for public accountability.

Every service record we produce is written assuming it could be pulled on a public-records request, referenced in a council committee, or attached to an audit response. Because in government work, it often is.

01

Indiana Pesticide Law (OISC)

Every technician is Office of Indiana State Chemist licensed and certified. Service records match commercial-facility documentation standards and stand up to public-records disclosure, state-inspector review, and any complaint-response process the OISC may run.

02

Public-Records-Grade Documentation

Indiana Access to Public Records Act (APRA) makes government pest-control records subject to public disclosure. Every service is digitally archived with timestamp, technician, product applied, site detail, and corrective-action note — formatted for clean disclosure without redaction complications or embarrassing gaps.

03

RFP & Purchasing Compliance

We produce RFP-format proposals, insurance certificates, W-9 and vendor-registration documentation, and pricing schedules suitable for city, county, and township purchasing processes. Multi-year contract compatibility with standard government payment terms and renewal structures.

04

Indiana DNR Protected Species

Bat and bird exclusion in historic government buildings requires coordination with Indiana Department of Natural Resources — protected species, maternity-season timing, and species-appropriate exclusion technique. We handle the DNR consultation, documentation, and compliant execution so the facility doesn't carry the regulatory exposure.

05

Historic Preservation Coordination

Indiana Statehouse, county-seat historic courthouses, and landmark-designated township buildings often carry state or federal historic-preservation status. Exterior treatment choice, exclusion material selection, and bird-netting visibility are coordinated with preservation requirements rather than creating a secondary preservation compliance problem.

06

Liability & Risk Management

Pest control records are also evidence for your risk-management and insurance carriers if a pest-related public incident (stinging-insect, bat exposure, rodent sighting in a public lobby) is ever reported or litigated. Every service is timestamped, itemized, and digitally archived — ready for risk-pool audit, council committee review, or legal discovery.

Our Process

How we protect your government facility.

01

Facility & Risk Assessment

We walk the full facility — public-facing lobbies, courtrooms, council chambers, offices, archive and records storage, mechanical spaces, exterior cornices and rooflines, attic access, and fleet/public-works areas where applicable. Map conducive conditions, existing pressure, and public-accountability exposure points.

02

Custom Service Plan & Proposal

Treatment selection, service frequency, documentation format, and RFP-compatible proposal built around your facility type, procurement process, public-records expectations, and preservation requirements.

03

Low-Toxicity Targeted Treatment

IPM-compliant products placed in crack-and-crevice harborage and locked service areas. Never broadcast in public lobbies, courtrooms, or council chambers during operating hours. Historic-building and DNR-protected-species work scheduled in compliance windows.

04

Public-Records-Grade Reporting

Digital service logs, trend tracking, public-records-disclosure-ready reports, and multi-facility rollups for county-wide or city-wide portfolios. Ready for council committee, auditor review, or APRA response on request.

What Government Facility Teams Say

Indianapolis-metro public-sector facility managers.

★★★★★
Our historic courthouse had pigeon issues on the cornices going back decades, and every vendor either wanted to treat without preservation awareness or told us it was impossible. ProTech coordinated with our preservation consultant, installed netting that respects the sight lines from the square, and the droppings issue at the public entry is resolved for the first time in anyone's memory.
Facilities Director
Central Indiana County Courthouse
★★★★★
We needed a vendor that could handle our RFP process cleanly, provide public-records-grade documentation, and not create a council-meeting problem with heavy-handed treatments in public areas. ProTech's proposal was the cleanest we received, and two years into the contract they've never given us a documentation gap.
Purchasing Officer
Indianapolis-Metro County Government
★★★★★
Our records-storage basement had ongoing mouse activity compromising document preservation. ProTech did the exclusion work, walked us through a monitoring protocol, and the archive has been clean for over a year. Their service reports are detailed enough that our clerk's office filed them directly into the facility-management record.
Clerk of Courts
Indiana County Seat Facility
Cities We Serve

Government facility pest control across the Indianapolis metro.

We service city, county, township, and special-district facilities across Marion, Hamilton, Hendricks, Johnson, Boone, Hancock, Madison, Shelby, and Morgan counties.

Counties Covered
  • Marion County
  • Hamilton County
  • Hendricks County
  • Johnson County
  • Boone County
  • Hancock County
  • Madison County
  • Shelby County
  • Morgan County
Frequently Asked

Government facility pest questions.

Can you participate in our municipal or county RFP process?
Yes. We produce RFP-compatible proposal formats with line-item pricing, service frequency schedules, insurance certificates, OISC licensing documentation, W-9 and vendor-registration materials, and reference lists appropriate for public-sector procurement. We've worked within city, county, and township purchasing processes across the metro — standard payment terms, multi-year contract structures, and renewal compatibility included.
How do you handle pest control in a courthouse or council chamber where public traffic is constant?
Low-toxicity, service-area placement, and scheduling during off-hours or recess windows. Gel baits in crack-and-crevice harborage within service closets and mechanical spaces — never broadcast treatment in public lobbies, courtrooms, or chambers. For public-facing spaces we lean on monitoring, exclusion, and sanitation consultation first, and treat during courthouse-closed windows (evenings, weekends, off-session days) when direct treatment is warranted.
Our archive has had a rodent problem for years — what's the fix?
Exclusion first, monitoring second, targeted treatment last. Archive rodent pressure is usually a building-envelope and utility-penetration issue — foundation gaps, sub-basement utility chases, floor-drain cleanouts, elevator shafts. We walk the archive, identify entry points, execute mechanical exclusion (seal the gaps), install interior snap-trap monitoring, and run exterior tamper-resistant stations. Once entry is sealed, the interior population resolves — and monitoring confirms it stays resolved. Chemical treatment inside an archive full of irreplaceable paper records is almost never the right approach.
We have bats in our historic courthouse attic — what's the process?
Indiana bats are protected species, and exclusion has to happen outside maternity season (roughly May-July). We consult with Indiana Department of Natural Resources, identify the species, confirm compliant timing, install one-way-door exclusion, seal all accessory entry points, and coordinate guano cleanup with proper PPE for histoplasmosis protection. The whole process is documented to DNR and facility standards. Rushed off-season removal creates legal exposure and typically makes the colony worse.
Our service records will be subject to public-records requests — how do you handle that?
Every service record is written assuming it could be disclosed under Indiana Access to Public Records Act. Timestamped, technician-attributed, product-itemized, site-specific, and digitally archived — no handwritten notes, no vague descriptions, no gaps. When a public-records request comes in, your clerk or records officer can produce our documentation directly without redaction complications or embarrassing content.
Can you handle pigeon and bird issues on historic building exteriors?
Yes, with historic-preservation coordination. Pigeon netting, bird spikes, ledge modification, and slope treatments can all be installed in ways that respect preservation requirements and sight-line considerations. We work with facility preservation consultants where relevant, rather than imposing a standard solution that creates a secondary preservation compliance problem. Exterior cleanup and ectoparasite treatment (bird mites, bird flea migration) are handled in the same scope.
We have multiple facilities across the county — can you service the whole portfolio?
Yes. Multi-facility county portfolios are a good fit for our model — courthouse, annex, admin building, public works, fleet facilities, parks and recreation, library branches. Each facility gets its own service schedule and site-specific plan, with consolidated county-wide or city-wide rollup reports for facilities-management leadership and council reporting. One point of contact, one documentation standard, one invoice structure.
Get Started

Talk to a commercial government facility pest specialist.

Tell us your facility, procurement process, and current pressure — we'll scope a plan, an RFP-compatible proposal, and a realistic timeline. No high-pressure sales, no call center, no forced contract.

  • Free on-site facility walkthrough
  • RFP-compatible proposal format — licensed and insured
  • DNR-compliant protected-species experience
  • Public-records-grade documentation on every visit
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100% commercial pest control in the Indianapolis metro. Tell us about your facility — we’ll be in touch.

Licensed & Insured · Owner-Operated · Aprehend® Certified