Large Canopy & Tensile Structure Cleaning

Your property’s large canopies and tensile structures do more than provide shade or shelter—they play a major role in your guests’ first impression. Yet they can be challenging to maintain. Limited access, significant height, and constant foot traffic often make routine cleaning difficult. Many general cleaning vendors lack the specialized expertise required for cleaning these structures.

That’s where we come in.

As part of the Valcourt Group, our A-1 Orange team—formerly known as Awnclean and based in Tampa, Florida—has decades of experience caring for awnings, canopies, and tensile structures nationwide. Our team understands the unique construction, materials, and environmental stresses these features face. With the proper techniques, equipment, and planning, we help property teams stay ahead of staining, discoloration, and organic growth before they impact guest experience or asset longevity.

We’ll guide you through what comprehensive canopy and tensile structure cleaning entails, why it matters for both aesthetics and performance, and how our specialized crews execute each project safely and efficiently with minimal disruption to your daily operations.

Service Overview

Large canopy and tensile structure cleaning focuses on the prominent fabric and membrane features that define your property—entry canopies, shade structures, amphitheater and stadium covers, and other architectural tensile elements. These structures enhance guest experience, protect key areas, and represent a significant capital investment.

Because they’re exposed to exhaust, pollen, pollution, bird activity, and moisture, they stain easily—especially light-colored materials and shaded sections where organic growth develops. Their height and complex geometry also make them difficult for in-house teams to access, and standard pressure washing can damage the material.

Proper cleaning requires specialized access planning, the right chemistry, and trained technicians. With the correct approach, you protect the asset, extend its service life, and maintain the clean, professional appearance your property depends on.

Why DIY or Deferred Cleaning Creates Bigger Challenges

Due to the access and technical demands, it can be tempting to postpone canopy cleaning or attempt to address it with general maintenance tools. Unfortunately, both approaches can create risks and unforeseen costs.

Here’s what to keep in mind:

  • Pressure Washing Risks: High-pressure equipment can damage fabric, remove protective coatings, or void manufacturer recommendations. Proper canopy care relies on controlled manual cleaning with the right chemistry.
  • Safety Concerns: Canopies are often elevated and require trained technicians, appropriate lifts, and fall protection protocols. Improvised work introduces avoidable liability.
  • Overspray and Property Impact: Cleaning products must be managed carefully at height. Without proper controls, overspray can affect guests, vehicles, landscaping, and building surfaces.
  • Warranty Considerations: Many tensile structure manufacturers outline specific cleaning requirements. Using incorrect methods or products may jeopardize warranty coverage.
  • Premature Wear: Staining and organic growth aren’t just aesthetic issues. If left untreated, contaminants can degrade membrane materials over time, accelerating aging and reducing the structure’s useful lifespan.

How We Approach It: The 5 Steps Behind Our Large Canopy Cleaning and Tensile Structure Service

Our approach is a structured, safety-first process designed specifically for large, complex tensile structures. Every step balances guest experience, risk management, and long-term asset protection.

Step 1: Discovery & Scope Development

Every project starts with a detailed site assessment. We evaluate the structure size, geometry, and access requirements, and review drawings or manufacturer data when available. We assess soil type, staining patterns, and previous cleaning history.

We also identify the operational constraints that matter to your team: guest traffic patterns, nearby equipment or attractions, landscaping, adjacent contractor work, and any noise or light restrictions. 

From there, we define the scope with your engineering and property teams, specifying which surfaces require attention (topside, underside, support members, mesh), acceptable work windows, and any special considerations, such as back-lit elements or sensitive finishes.

Step 2: Safety and Access Planning for Large-Scale Structures

Canopy cleaning at height requires serious planning. 

We develop site-specific safety and access plans that determine lift types and sizes needed to reach 100-foot spans and high attachment points. We identify setup locations, swing radius requirements, and ground protection needs.

Coordination with your property and engineering teams involves setting up barricades, implementing traffic control measures, and ensuring safe working conditions around other contractors. We address compliance requirements head-on, including fall protection protocols, equipment inspections, operator certifications, and job hazard analyses tailored to your specific structure and site. 

Step 3: Material-Specific, Manufacturer-Approved Cleaning Process

Depending on the structure’s material and current condition, we select the most suitable cleaning method to ensure safe and effective results. We pretreat surfaces with carefully chosen cleaners and, where applicable, algaecides to loosen contaminants and address mildew on exterior membranes and sheltered undersides where debris accumulates.

The cleaning process relies on controlled, manual techniques rather than aggressive pressure. Crews hand-clean surfaces using manufacturer-approved products and soft-brushing methods, often working from lifts or extended poles to protect the material while covering large spans. We rinse thoroughly to prevent spotting, allow the surfaces to dry, and conduct a detailed inspection to ensure even, streak-free results.

For back-lit, specialty, or sensitive membrane sections, we pretest all cleaning solutions to ensure compatibility before full application.

Step 4: Protection, Sealing, and Extending Asset Life

Clean membranes can benefit from proper sealing. We apply manufacturer-recommended, appropriate vinyl or fabric sealers that enhance water repellency, create a protective barrier against future contaminants, and provide UV protection to reduce sun damage and fading.

A clean, sealed membrane sheds dirt more easily, slows future staining, and can significantly extend the canopy’s service life. That translates to deferred replacement costs and better long-term value from your original investment. 

We follow manufacturer guidance on chemistry and methods to support warranty compliance and preserve structural integrity.

Step 5: Scheduling Around Operations and Creating a Maintenance Program

Finally, we schedule canopy cleaning during nighttime or low-traffic periods to minimize disruptions to daily operations at attractions, retail centers, transit facilities, and commercial properties. Your guests and tenants shouldn’t know we were there until they notice how good everything looks.

We also recommend setting up recurring cleaning frequencies, whether semi-annual or annual, to prevent heavy buildup and keep each service efficient and predictable. Property managers and building engineers can integrate canopy cleaning into capital and operating budgets, bundling with other façade, window, or specialty cleaning services for greater efficiency across the property.

Keep Your Canopies Working as Hard as You Do

Because your large canopies and tensile structures sit at the intersection of first impressions and long-term investment, they deserve a cleaning approach that matches their value: specialized methods, proper chemistry, and crews who understand how to work at height without damaging the material or disrupting your operations. Planned maintenance keeps tenants and guests satisfied and eliminates the risks associated with improvised solutions or years of deferred attention.

Our teams bring the expertise, equipment, and safety protocols that complex canopy and large tensile structure cleaning demands require. We also deliver façade cleaning, window cleaning, and comprehensive exterior maintenance programs, allowing you to consolidate vendors and minimize coordination headaches across your portfolio. 

When you’re ready to get your canopies back to their best, contact us for a site assessment or to discuss a tailored maintenance plan.


Canopy & Awning Cleaning: Expert Answers to FAQs

Canopies and awnings may take up a small share of your maintenance budget, but they make a big impact. Neglecting them accelerates deterioration and leads to premature replacement. When fabric structures accumulate grime and mildew, tenants notice, and their service life is shortened.

The challenge most property teams face isn’t recognizing the problem, it’s knowing what actually works. How often do you really need to clean? Which chemicals won’t void warranties or damage materials? Does sealing justify the cost? When does it make sense to handle cleaning in-house versus bringing in a contractor?

Below, we answer five frequently asked questions by property managers and building engineers regarding canopy and awning cleaning. We offer specific guidance on frequency by environment, material-safe chemistry, sealing schedules, vendor selection criteria, and how to structure a maintenance program that protects both appearance and budget. 

How Often Should Canopy and Awning Cleaning Happen?

Plan canopy and awning cleaning three to four times per year to protect appearance and extend fabric life without overinvesting in labor. However, that’s just a baseline. Where your schedule needs adjustment depends on what your canopies face daily.

For properties near highways, airports, or kitchen exhaust that accumulate airborne pollutants faster, we recommend a monthly clean to keep ahead of grime. Heavy tree cover exacerbates the problem in different ways, adding organic debris and creating conditions that favor the growth of mildew. Coastal and humid climates (i.e., Florida) compound both issues through constant moisture, insect activity, and intense UV exposure.

Factory clear coats like 3M or Tedlar help, but they slow down the buildup rather than prevent it. The fabric still requires consistent attention.

Set your cadence based on these exposures, then review conditions quarterly to determine if you need to increase frequencies. Catching deterioration early prevents visible damage and the replacement costs that follow.

Which Cleaning Chemicals and Methods Are Safest?

Catching problems early through regular cleaning only works if you use the correct cleaning methods and solutions.

Material identification comes first. Canopy and awning material and weight determine which products work without causing damage. Contact the manufacturer when possible to confirm specifications.

A handful of established product lines exist specifically for cleaning and sealing awnings and canopies. Our experts can determine the best cleaning solution and sealer for your canopy and awnings, depending on the material (acrylic, polyester, vinyl, etc.) and condition.

How you clean also matters as much as what you use. Professional awning cleaning addresses both exterior and underside, uses low-pressure rinsing instead of pressure washing, and protects lighting, speakers, and electrical components underneath.

Make sure you keep your vendors accountable. Require them to document material identification, provide chemical lists with Safety Data Sheets, specify sealer type by material, confirm rinse method, and outline underside protection. 

Do We Really Need to Seal — and How Often?

Yes. Sealing extends fabric life and prevents the damage that leads to premature replacement.

The frequency depends on the material and treatments, such as whether it is printed or blank. We always recommend sticking to the awning and canopy manufacturer’s recommendations.

Properties that maintain sealing schedules experience measurable benefits, including stronger UV resistance, better protection against stains and mildew, and preserved color across the portfolio. Properties that skip sealing face faded, deteriorating canopies within months, regardless of cleaning frequency.

Most important is the cost difference. Sealing after canopy and awning cleaning adds minimal expense compared to replacing damaged fabric years ahead of schedule. It also has a positive effect on your property’s curb appeal.

When Should We Call a Professional vs. Handle In-House?

Knowing the proper procedures is important, but so is knowing when to bring in the experts. Working at heights and around specialized materials comes with serious safety considerations, so professional canopy and awning cleaning services should be called when:

  • Safety is a concern. Anytime work requires ladders, lifts, or access at height, trained technicians with proper fall protection equipment should take the lead.

  • You’re managing mixed materials or coatings. Different fabrics, sealants, and metals need specific cleaning solutions and methods to prevent costly damage.

  • There are electrical components underneath. Lighting, speakers, or wiring must be shielded from moisture and treated with low-pressure cleaning techniques.

  • Minor maintenance is needed. Professionals can safely perform small patches or surface repairs on backlit or tensioned units.

  • Major repairs arise. The manufacturer or a qualified vendor should always handle structural rework, fabric replacement, or electrical fixture servicing.

When in doubt, call an expert. Our trained professionals have the right equipment, knowledge, and safety protocols to keep your canopy and awning systems performing.

How Do We Build a Smart Maintenance Plan and Budget?

A well-structured maintenance plan protects your investment, your tenants, and your team. We recommend starting with quarterly canopy and awning cleaning as a baseline. Properties located near pollution sources, grease exhaust, or heavy tree cover may require bimonthly or even monthly service to prevent buildup and staining.

Always apply sealers according to manufacturer guidelines, as this can directly affect warranty coverage and long-term performance.

Centralize key details for each property, including material identification, service history, and asset condition, to ensure consistent care across your portfolio. Standardize scopes of work by material type, defining cleaning products and sealing specifications, and include post-storm or seasonal inspections in regions with high pollen or weather exposure.

Tracking performance is just as important. Measure your program’s success through avoided replacements, reduced repair costs, and extended fabric life. Properties that maintain consistent schedules typically preserve aesthetics and defer capital expenses far longer than those that clean reactively.

And you don’t have to figure it out alone. We can help you design a comprehensive canopy and awning maintenance program tailored to your specific materials, safety requirements, and budget. Our team will work with you to develop schedules, document specifications, and ensure that every aspect of your program meets manufacturer and safety standards.

Stop Replacing What You Could Be Maintaining

Canopy and awning care isn’t just about keeping things clean; it’s about extending the life of valuable assets and maintaining a safe, professional environment. The difference between reactive cleaning and proactive maintenance is years of service life and thousands in avoided costs.

Our teams don’t just wash fabric—we build comprehensive maintenance programs tailored to your portfolio, safety needs, and budget. From safe access at height to the right cleaning solutions and sealants, our teams handle every detail so you don’t have to.