
Three Surfaces, One Visit: Cleaning a Columbus Driveway, Walkway, and Fence
May 29, 2026




Some windows are easy. Others tower two stories into a peaked glass facade that no ladder can safely reach. At St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church on West Woodruff Avenue in Columbus, the architecture is the centerpiece, and that meant the glass needed an approach built for height.
Clean Life Exterior Cleaning was brought in to clean the exterior windows on this striking modernist church. Here’s how we handled it.
St. Stephen’s isn’t a standard storefront or a row of double-hung windows. The front of the building rises in a dramatic A-frame, with a triangular wall of glass climbing all the way to the peak. Below it sits a band of blue mosaic tile and a row of entry doors framed in more glass.
Beautiful to look at, but a real challenge to clean. The upper panes sit far beyond the reach of a standard ladder, and putting someone up high on a structure like this introduces risk that isn’t worth taking when there’s a safer, better way.
For tall glass like this, we used a water-fed pole system. The pole extends from the ground all the way up to the highest panes, fed by purified water that cleans the glass and rinses it spot-free without any soap residue left behind.
The advantages are simple:
It’s a method designed for exactly this kind of job: high, expansive glass where safety and a clean finish matter equally.
With the exterior glass cleaned, the facade does what the architect intended. Light moves through it cleanly, the reflections are crisp, and the whole front of the building reads sharp and well kept. For a church that sits as a landmark on its street, a clean exterior makes a real difference in how the space welcomes its community.
For buildings with height and detail like St. Stephen’s, professional cleaning is about more than appearance:
Whether it’s a soaring church facade, a commercial storefront, or a home with hard-to-reach windows, Clean Life Exterior Cleaning has the tools and approach to get it done safely and cleanly.