NADCA-certified air duct, coil and concession-exhaust cleaning for movie theaters and entertainment venues — comfortable, odor-free auditoriums packed with guests, cleaned around your showtimes. Nationwide, 24/7.
Auditoriums surge from empty to full in minutes. HVAC has to move huge air volumes — and stays cleaner when the ducts are clean.
Popcorn oil, butter and cooking residue coat exhaust and drift into the lobby. Source removal clears it at the duct.
Stuffy, warm auditoriums drive complaints and refunds. Clean coils and ducts hold temperature and airflow.
We work overnight and between screenings so the box office never closes.
Photos and a closeout report for corporate standards, health inspections and insurance.
A modern auditorium is one of the most demanding air-handling challenges in commercial real estate: a large, sealed volume that fills with hundreds of people in a few minutes, breathes heavily for two hours, then empties. The HVAC system has to condition all of that air fast and quietly — and when the ductwork and coils are loaded with dust and concession residue, it can't keep up.
Guests feel the result immediately: a warm, stuffy room, stale or greasy air drifting from the lobby, and that faint musty smell that makes a theater feel neglected. Concession stands add flammable cooking grease to exhaust systems, and sticky butter and oil aerosols settle throughout. It all ends up in the air conveyance system.
Professional cleaning removes odors and residue at the source, restores comfort and airflow, cuts fire and energy risk, and keeps auditoriums selling. The numbers make the case:

From NFPA 96 concession-exhaust requirements to ASHRAE 62.1 ventilation and the NADCA ACR Standard, high-occupancy entertainment venues are expected to keep their air systems clean, safe and documented. Duct, coil and exhaust cleanliness is what keeps your auditoriums comfortable and your guests coming back.
Clean coils and ducts hold temperature and airflow through packed showings, cutting complaints and refunds.
Source removal clears popcorn, butter and musty odors from the ductwork so the lobby and auditoriums smell fresh.
NFPA 96 exhaust cleaning removes flammable cooking grease from concession hoods and ducts.
Clean airflow cuts energy waste and emergency HVAC calls across every screen.
Cinemas load their air systems in bursts. Hundreds of guests shed dust and dander; concession stands push oil aerosols and grease into exhaust; and huge return-air paths pull in lobby and auditorium debris. It collects on coils, in supply and return ducts and in air handlers that then recirculate it through every seat.
Few commercial spaces combine such large sealed volumes, such rapid occupancy swings and such greasy concession exhaust. Work has to be phased overnight and between screenings, by crews who understand high-occupancy venues and NFPA 96 exhaust — not just office duct cleaning.
Butter and oil aerosols settle throughout the air system and the porous interior of ductwork, then re-emit every time the HVAC runs. Cleaning the surfaces isn't enough; source removal from the ductwork eliminates the smell at the cause.
Follow the NADCA ACR Standard for HVAC and NFPA 96 for concession exhaust: inspect at least annually, clean HVAC every 2–3 years, and clean concession exhaust on the NFPA schedule for your cooking volume. Every project should close with documentation.




Inspect HVAC and concession exhaust, photograph conditions and scope around showtimes.
Seal work zones under negative pressure with HEPA filtration to protect guests and staff.
Source-remove dust, grease and residue from ducts, coils and exhaust to NADCA/NFPA criteria.
Matched-angle photos and checks confirm cleanliness before doors open.
Documentation for corporate standards, inspections and a re-inspection cadence.
Not every duct cleaner can turn a busy multiplex around overnight. For theaters, require NADCA certification and NFPA 96 concession-exhaust capability, crews that work between screenings, command of containment and odor source removal, and documentation your corporate and health inspectors will accept. IAQ Restoration delivers all of it — and the closeout records to prove it.
Yes. We work overnight and between screenings, with each area isolated under negative pressure, so the box office and showings continue uninterrupted.
Yes. Those odors live in the ductwork and concession exhaust. We source-remove the grease and residue and treat the system so the smell is eliminated rather than masked.
Yes. We clean concession hoods, ducts and exhaust fans to remove flammable grease per NFPA 96, on the schedule your cooking volume requires.
Inspect at least annually; clean HVAC every 2–3 years per the NADCA ACR Standard, and concession exhaust on the NFPA 96 schedule for your cooking volume.
Yes. Our national team runs multi-site theater programs under one scope, schedule and point of contact, with consistent documentation for every location.
Often, yes. Dust-loaded coils and ducts choke airflow and heat exchange. Cleaning restores the design capacity so the system can keep a packed house comfortable.
NADCA-certified, NFPA 96-capable crews, nationwide. Free scope review for your theater or circuit.
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