Manual dismantling of buildings

The traditional method of dismantling is known as manual dismantling, carried out using various power tools: demolition hammers, impact hammers, and gas torches. Foregoing heavy equipment in favour of manual dismantling brings many benefits. Manual building dismantling does not emit as much noise and does not generate as intense vibrations. Choosing manual dismantling means that the immediate surroundings do not experience the level of discomfort that mechanical dismantling might cause. Furthermore, manual building dismantling allows for careful sorting of the resulting waste and enables the removal of specific parts of a building without damaging them.

construction worker

Precise manual dismantling in difficult conditions

There are circumstances in which heavy equipment is too invasive or simply cannot access the site. In such situations, manual building dismantling becomes the only sensible solution, preserving the intact structure of adjacent buildings. Our workers, using specialist pneumatic and combustion tools, dismantle walls, floors, and structural elements centimetre by centimetre. This approach guarantees full supervision at every stage of the works, minimising the risk of uncontrolled collapses or damage to underground infrastructure.

Why choose manual dismantling?

Manual building dismantling allows for careful sorting of the resulting waste and enables the removal of specific parts of a building without damaging them. This allows for the recovery of valuable demolition bricks, timber, or steel elements, often reducing the final cost of rubble removal. We carry out manual building dismantling wherever near-surgical precision is required – in densely built urban areas, inside operational production halls, and when dismantling historic architectural details. Thanks to our experience, the process proceeds efficiently and in compliance with stringent health and safety standards.