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Government contracts for window cleaning in Tennessee
A snapshot of open federal, state, and local opportunities in Tennessee, updated daily. To search them and get daily matches for your business, sign up free.
About window cleaning contracts in Tennessee
Window cleaning contracts in Tennessee typically cover interior and exterior window washing at federal office buildings, high-rise and atrium glass cleaning at courthouses, building-facade and curtain-wall washing, post-construction window cleanup, and recurring storefront and ground-floor glass-care IDIQs. Federal posts in this category fall under NAICS 561790 (Other Services to Buildings and Dwellings), the classification that covers exterior and interior window cleaning, with some bundled work falling under 561720 (Janitorial Services), and the bulk of the work flows to the GSA Public Buildings Service, DoD installations, and VA medical centers. Window-cleaning and building-exterior work is almost always small-business set-aside given typical award sizes, and high-rise scopes require certified rope-access or aerial-lift operators plus liability coverage.
There are no open window cleaning contracts visible in Tennessee right now, but new postings land daily — historically this category sees several postings per month statewide. Setting up a saved search now means catching the next Tennessee post the moment it hits SAM.gov or the state procurement portal, often several days before vendors who only check manually each week. Buyers span a mix of federal civilian agencies, DoD installations, and state and local governments active in Tennessee.
Beyond federal opportunities, much of the window cleaning work in Tennessee is posted through Edison Supplier Portal (Tennessee), with recurring buyers including the Tennessee Department of Transportation, the University of Tennessee System, and Metro Nashville. Central Procurement Office runs the Go-DBE and Diversity Business Enterprise programs that gate access to dedicated set-aside spend. ContractRadar pulls federal postings from SAM.gov alongside state and local feeds so a window-cleaning vendor doesn't have to monitor each portal manually.