Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Don’t procrastinate, eliminate...

With your busy lifestyle and hectic schedule, generally you do not have time to consider things that do not impact your everyday life. But one thing is for sure, the junk will keep adding up.
Ever look around your place and noticed all the clutter littering each room.
Eliminate it immediately.
Dimola Bros. Rubbish Removal Professionals clean out homes, apartments, and condos. We will remove everything from a single couch, carpets, debri, tear ups to refrigerators, and washing machines and even long accumulated household trash.

 

With such kitchen appliances as big as a refrigerator and, washer and dryers, they need to be taken away with extreme care. They can not be dragged out to the curb; you need to dispose of it in an environmentally safe way.

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We are easy as a click away DiMolaBros.com or call 1-718-326-6969.

Dimola Bros. are experienced dealing with the different regulations of New York City regarding what can be thrown away, how and when. If it's something as simple as a loveseat, some areas have strict laws that end up as hefty fines.

We also specialize in garages, basements, attics, all type of yards or just waste around your home.

Dimola Bros is a full House Selling Spruce up and Rubbish Removal Service

Call for free estimate! 718-326-6969 and visit us online at http://www.dimolabros.com & see all we have to offer.

We are home improvement specialists, suitable for massive amounts of waste disposal needs such as new construction waste, renovation debris, roof strip offs, and removal of general rubbish.

Our safe and friendly drivers pick it up and haul it away in our brand new fleet of high end dump trucks on the same day. Right into the truck and right out of your way. Our trucks are larger than our competitors and our rates are cheaper

We arrive on time, take care of the job in hand and when the job is complete, we give the area a sweep up. We do all the work and nothing is left untouched.
Dimola Bros. pride themselves on providing fast and efficient service.

Call Dimola Bros, the Trash Removal Specialist today 1-718-326-6969

Let our professional staff help you organize and dispose of the waste and leave all the heavy lifting to us.

Dimola Bros is a full House Selling Spruce up and Rubbish Removal Service

Call for free estimate! 760-489-6001 and visit us online at http://www.dimolabros.com & see all we have to offer.

About DiMola Brothers

DiMola Brothers Is one of the premier demolition contractor and scrap metal removal contractors in New York City. DiMola Brothers Demolition is a family owned rubbish removal and interior demolition company based in Ridgewood, Queens, New York. We started as a small neighborhood business and over the past 50 years have grown to a larger scale serving businesses, contractors, organizations and residential customers in Brooklyn, Queens, Manhattan and the Bronx. Nicholas George DiMola, President of DiMola Bros, was born and raised in Ridgewood, Queens and has been running the family business for the past 15 years

As you view our website, www.dimolabros.com you will see how Nick’s love of the business has evolved into salvaging and preserving many items long since seen or used. As a family owned and operated business we take a personable approach to each project we undertake.

We take great pride in our work and as a result we offer a service like no other. Early on in our endeavor to become the company people would want to use, we learned the value of our customers and how important personal recommendation can be.

Contact Information

DiMola Brothers – Main Office

1640 Summerfield Street

Ridgewood, NY‎ 11385

Phone - (718) 326-6969‎

Fax - (718) 326-7979

Website: http://www.dimolabros.com

Email: nick@dimolabros.com

Sunday, July 19, 2009

One man's trash turned into Nick DiMola's treasure.

Professional mover finds $16,500 in rare antiquities in the trash

Updated Sunday, July 19th 2009, 12:31 PM

Costanza for News

Art expert Howard Nowes (r.) examines artifacts found by Nick DiMola.

Five years after the Queens rubbish remover, http://www.dimolabros.com, took home a mysterious barrel from a SoHo apartment, he opened it to find dozens of ancient Mexican artifacts.

The mix of bowls, figurines and jugs were made between 300 B.C. and 500 A.D., some by Mayans.

They're worth an estimated $16,500 - and DiMola said he's not at all surprised.

"There's always something in the garbage worth money," he said.

DiMola, 39, came to own the booty when his Ridgewood company was hired to clear the cluttered space of abstract artist Clinton Hill, who died in 2003.

Hill left his possessions to his longtime partner, Allen Tran, who died just months later, said John Koegel, a lawyer for their estates.

The couple's property fell to friends, who formed a nonprofit foundation to take the valuables from the studio.

Hill's estate paid DiMola about $4,500 in October 2004 to clean out the artist's Prince St. apartment, studio and basement storage.

The scuffed cardboard barrel was mistakenly considered trash and DiMola stuck it in a warehouse, where it collected dust for years.

He recently decided to peek inside just to see what treasure might await.

Even though no one intended to toss out the artifacts, Koegel said the foundation has no legal claim to recoup them from DiMola.

"If he is given a contract by the owner of property to remove and dispose of certain things, if the owner makes the mistake, that's the way it is," Koegel said.

Still, the attorney declined to congratulate DiMola on his find.

"I'm not happy for him," Koegel said. "I'm sorry that [barrel] slipped through the cracks."

The most valuable object that DiMola brought to upper East Side art dealer Howard Nowes for appraisal was a $1,000 stone ax god - perhaps intended as a sacrifice - from the Mezcala region of Mexico.

As for the pieces' future, DiMola said he first planned to pack them back into the barrel. He doesn't collect ancient art, so he said he was open to selling the pieces.

"I don't see the beauty in this, to be honest with you," he said. "I like things about history, but this pottery doesn't grab me."