Air Duct Cleaning in Century City, CA
If you manage or own a unit in one of Century City’s high-rise towers along Century Park East or Avenue of the Stars, air duct cleaning here is a different conversation than it is anywhere else in Los Angeles. The building stock in the 90067 ZIP code is almost entirely 1960s–1980s construction, and those original duct systems carry problems that a generic cleaning crew simply isn’t equipped to handle. Our Air Duct Cleaning team knows these buildings — the centralized air-handling units, the long trunk lines, the delaminating duct board — and we bring commercial-grade equipment and verified processes to match. Call us at (424) 380-6917 to schedule a free assessment.

Why Pure Air Duct Cleaners West Hollywood Is Century City’s Preferred Air Duct Cleaning Company
We’ve been serving Century City for nine years, and that focus on a single specialty — duct and HVAC cleaning, nothing else — means Paul Johnson has worked inside more Century City mechanical rooms than most cleaning companies have visited in total. Paul leads every job personally as the hands-on lead technician. You’re not getting a subcontractor or a crew dispatched from a franchise call center. You’re getting the person who built this business.
613 verified customer reviews at a 4.9-star average don’t happen by accident. They reflect consistent, repeatable results across hundreds of jobs — including high-rise commercial work that many companies decline entirely because they lack the equipment or experience for it. When building engineers in Century City’s older towers call us back a second and third time, that’s the proof point we’re most proud of.
Our proximity to Century City means we’re on-site quickly, and because Paul coordinates directly with building engineers before any equipment enters a mechanical room, there’s no lag caused by miscommunication between a field tech and a distant scheduler.
Our Air Duct Cleaning Services in Century City
Commercial Duct Cleaning
This is the core of what we do in Century City. The towers along Century Park East and near the Westfield Century City shopping center run centralized AHU systems with main trunk lines spanning dozens of floors and branch networks that connect hundreds of individual supply and return registers. Cleaning those systems properly requires commercial-capacity Nikro negative-air machines — not the portable residential rigs that smaller operations bring to jobs like this. We deploy across multiple mechanical rooms simultaneously when a building’s layout demands it, coordinating every phase with the building’s chief engineer to protect occupied floors throughout the process.
Video Inspection
In Century City’s older towers, a visual inspection from a supply register opening tells you almost nothing useful. Our Rotobrush camera system lets us travel the full length of trunk lines and branch ducts, documenting actual conditions — compacted debris, delaminating duct board, breached liner material — before we ever power on a vacuum machine. That footage matters: it’s the difference between a standard cleaning pass and catching a section of deteriorating duct board that will keep shedding particles into conditioned air within weeks of a cleaning if it isn’t encapsulated. In Century City, video inspection isn’t optional; it’s how we avoid expensive callbacks and protect building occupants from ongoing contamination.
Full System Cleaning
A full system cleaning covers every component in the air pathway: supply ducts, return ducts, air-handling unit coils, drain pans, and blower assemblies. In Century City’s high-rises, these systems have often run continuously for 40-plus years with minimal deep cleaning, and particulate buildup in the AHU coil section alone can measurably reduce HVAC efficiency. We treat the system as a single connected network — cleaning one section while leaving contamination in another just redistributes the problem. Full system cleaning also gives us the complete picture we need to identify any sections that require repair, sealing, or encapsulation rather than cleaning alone.
Residential Duct Cleaning
Not every address in Century City is a 30-story tower. The neighborhood includes high-end residential condominiums where individual unit duct systems — while smaller in scale than a full commercial network — still carry the complexity of older construction and shared-air infrastructure. We apply the same inspection-first approach to residential duct cleaning in Century City that we use on full commercial jobs: video confirmation of actual conditions, proper negative-air containment, and documentation you can pass along to your HOA or property manager if questions arise later.
Supply Duct Cleaning
Supply ducts push conditioned air from the AHU out to every occupied space in the building. In Century City’s older towers, those supply runs are long, often branch repeatedly across multiple floors, and may still contain the original fibrous duct-board liner that was standard in 1960s–70s construction. When that liner starts to delaminate — and in buildings of this age, it regularly does — the supply duct becomes a delivery mechanism for airborne fibrous particles. We clear compacted debris and document liner condition throughout every supply run we clean.
Return Duct Cleaning
Return ducts pull air back to the AHU from occupied spaces, and in a high-rise that sits in the western LA Basin’s inversion layer, they’re pulling in air that carries elevated concentrations of fine particulate matter, wildfire smoke residue, and urban smog. Century City’s rooftop HVAC intakes cycle through that air continuously, and the return duct network is often where the heaviest particulate loading accumulates. A clean return system is what allows the AHU filtration to work as designed — skipping the return run means the contamination just keeps recirculating.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in Century City
Century City’s centralized HVAC systems frequently incorporate air-quality and filtration components from Honeywell and Aprilaire — brands we work with across the full range of commercial and residential applications. For sanitizing treatments after cleaning, we use Abatement Technologies and Guardsman products, both matched to the specific contamination profiles we encounter in older high-rise duct stock. When encapsulation is required, we’re familiar with the material specifications that Century City buildings’ engineering teams typically require for documentation and compliance. One call covers the cleaning, the treatment, and any follow-up product needs.
What Makes Century City’s Air Duct Cleaning Jobs Uniquely Complex
Century City was built on the former 20th Century Fox studio backlot beginning in the early 1960s, and virtually its entire building stock — towers like the Century Plaza Towers and the residential high-rises along Century Park East — was constructed in a single concentrated wave between the mid-1960s and the 1980s. That’s not a real-estate footnote; it’s the defining factor in every duct cleaning job we run here.

The original interior duct board used in that construction era was a fibrous material that, after 40-plus years of continuous HVAC cycling, has begun to delaminate in many of these buildings. When it does, it sheds particles directly into conditioned air on every floor the duct network serves. A job that starts as a standard commercial duct cleaning on Century Park East will regularly escalate to full duct encapsulation or liner replacement once our Rotobrush camera confirms the liner’s actual condition — a scope of work we almost never encounter at this frequency in newer suburban markets.
We’ve been in these buildings. Our crew was called to a 28-story residential high-rise on Century Park East where building engineers had flagged visible debris fallout from supply registers on multiple mid-tower floors — the classic sign of delaminating 1960s duct board shedding fibrous particles directly into conditioned air. After coordinating access with the building’s chief engineer and conducting a pre-job asbestos screen on the original duct insulation, we deployed Nikro commercial-grade negative-air equipment across three mechanical rooms simultaneously, clearing years of compacted particulate from the main trunk lines and branch networks. Video inspection with our Rotobrush camera confirmed two duct sections required encapsulation rather than cleaning alone, and we completed the liner treatment before returning airflow to all affected floors. That’s not a one-in-a-hundred job in Century City. It’s a pattern.
There’s also an asbestos dimension that sets these towers apart. Many of Century City’s original high-rises contain asbestos-wrapped duct insulation from that construction era. Introducing high-powered vacuum equipment into a duct system with compromised asbestos insulation — without a pre-job abatement verification — can aerosolize hazardous fibers throughout a multi-floor tower. That’s not a risk any responsible contractor takes. We treat asbestos pre-screening as a non-negotiable first step on any Century City tower built before 1980, and we don’t move equipment until that clearance is in hand.
Common Air Duct Problems We See in Century City Buildings
- Delaminating fibrous duct-board liner: Original 1960s–70s duct board in Century City’s towers has a finite service life, and many buildings have now exceeded it. When the inner liner starts to peel, it becomes an ongoing particle source that no cleaning pass alone can resolve — encapsulation or liner replacement is the correct answer, and we confirm which one with video inspection before recommending either.
- Accelerated particulate fouling from LA Basin temperature inversions: Century City sits in the western LA Basin where persistent temperature inversions trap fine particulate matter, wildfire smoke, and urban smog at low altitudes for extended periods each year. Rooftop HVAC intakes on these towers continuously cycle through elevated PM2.5 concentrations, fouling duct interiors significantly faster than comparable buildings just two miles west in Santa Monica. Cleaning intervals that work in coastal properties may not be sufficient here.
- Undersized or residential-grade equipment brought to commercial jobs: We regularly encounter Century City buildings where a previous cleaning vendor used portable residential-grade equipment on a centralized AHU system spanning dozens of floors. Those rigs can’t adequately pressurize the long trunk lines, meaning they move surface debris without extracting compacted buildup from deeper in the duct network. The result looks clean at the register and isn’t.
- Asbestos screening skipped on pre-1980 duct insulation: In Century City specifically, skipping the abatement verification step before deploying high-powered vacuum equipment is a serious hazard, not a procedural shortcut. We’ve been called into buildings where a previous vendor bypassed this step and spread disturbed fibers into occupied spaces. That’s a liability event — and an avoidable one.
Pricing for Air Duct Cleaning in Century City, CA
Air duct cleaning in Century City runs higher than the LA average, and that’s a direct reflection of what the work actually involves here. A standard residential condo unit duct cleaning in the 90067 ZIP typically runs $350–$600. Commercial high-rise duct cleaning — involving centralized AHU systems, multi-floor trunk and branch networks, and coordinated mechanical room access — generally starts at $1,200 and scales with building size, system complexity, and number of mechanical rooms involved. If video inspection reveals delaminating duct board requiring encapsulation, that adds $800–$2,500+ depending on the linear footage of affected duct sections. Pre-job asbestos screening, when required, is arranged through a certified third-party abatement firm and priced separately. We give you a clear, itemized estimate before any work begins. Call (424) 380-6917 — the estimate is free.
We Also Serve Cities Near Century City
Beyond Century City, we regularly handle residential and commercial duct cleaning jobs throughout the surrounding area — including Beverly Hills, West Hollywood, Hollywood, and Studio City. If you’re a property manager overseeing multiple buildings across these neighborhoods, we can coordinate service scheduling across locations. Call (424) 380-6917 to discuss multi-site coverage.
Serving Century City, CA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Century City area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Air Duct Cleaning in Century City
Yes — in any Century City tower built before approximately 1980, asbestos pre-screening on original duct insulation is a required first step before vacuum equipment is introduced into the system. The duct insulation used in that construction era frequently contained asbestos, and high-powered negative-air machines can aerosolize disturbed fibers throughout a multi-floor building if that insulation is compromised. We arrange pre-job abatement verification through a certified third-party firm before any Century City tower job of that vintage begins. Don’t skip this step — the liability and health consequences of getting it wrong are severe. Call (424) 380-6917 to discuss the pre-screening process for your specific building.
Century City’s position in the western LA Basin puts it squarely inside the zone where persistent temperature inversions trap fine particulate matter, wildfire smoke, and urban smog at low altitudes for extended stretches each year. The rooftop HVAC intakes on Century City’s towers continuously pull that elevated-PM2.5 air through the duct system, accelerating particulate fouling compared to coastal properties in Santa Monica just two miles west, where ocean breezes more regularly disperse the inversion layer. The practical result: duct cleaning intervals that work in Santa Monica buildings may need to be shortened by 20–30% in Century City towers to maintain equivalent air quality. Call (424) 380-6917 and we’ll assess your building’s actual fouling rate during an inspection.
Duct encapsulation is a process where a specialized sealant is applied to the interior surfaces of a duct section to bind deteriorating liner material — typically delaminating fibrous duct board — in place so it can no longer shed particles into conditioned air. It’s the correct remediation when video inspection confirms that the liner has broken down beyond the point where cleaning alone would stabilize it. Century City’s towers are dominated by 1960s–1980s construction that used fibrous duct board as the standard interior liner, and after four-plus decades of continuous HVAC cycling, that material has reached end-of-life in many buildings. We run into encapsulation-scope jobs in Century City at a frequency we simply don’t encounter in newer suburban markets. Call (424) 380-6917 to schedule a video inspection that will confirm whether encapsulation is actually needed in your building.
A Century City high-rise job is a coordinated, multi-technician commercial deployment — not a scaled-up version of a residential visit. It requires advance coordination with the building’s chief engineer, asbestos pre-screening on older duct insulation, access to multiple mechanical rooms across the building, and commercial-capacity Nikro negative-air machines capable of maintaining adequate vacuum across long trunk lines and complex branch networks spanning dozens of floors. A residential job typically involves one technician, a single AHU, and duct runs measured in tens of linear feet. A Century City tower job may involve hundreds of linear feet of main trunk line and dozens of branch runs, with access and sequencing managed to keep occupied floors serviceable throughout the process. Paul leads every job personally, regardless of scale. Call (424) 380-6917 to talk through the scope of your specific building.
Yes — and in Century City’s older towers, it’s the only reliable way to make that call before committing to either scope of work. Our Rotobrush camera system travels the full interior of trunk lines and branch ducts, documenting actual liner condition, particulate accumulation, and any sections where duct board has begun to delaminate. That footage gives you a documented record of existing conditions and lets us give you a precise recommendation — standard cleaning, encapsulation, or liner replacement — backed by visual evidence rather than a surface-level guess from a register opening. Skipping video inspection in a Century City high-rise and performing a standard cleaning on a system with delaminating liner means that system will be shedding fibrous particles again within weeks. Call (424) 380-6917 to schedule a video inspection as a standalone first step if you want the full picture before committing to any service.
Schedule Your Century City Air Duct Cleaning Assessment
Century City’s duct systems have specific demands — the age of the building stock, the complexity of centralized AHU networks, the pre-screening requirements, the delaminating duct board that shifts scope from cleaning to encapsulation. Paul Johnson has been working through those demands, building by building, for nine years. 613 verified reviews at a 4.9-star average reflect that track record. If you manage or own a property in Century City and you’re ready to get an accurate picture of what your duct system actually needs — not a generic quote over the phone — call us at (424) 380-6917 for a free on-site assessment. We’ll tell you exactly what we find and exactly what it’ll take to fix it.
Reviewed by Paul Johnson, Owner and Lead Technician at Pure Air Duct Cleaners West Hollywood, serving Century City and the surrounding Los Angeles area since 2016.