High School & Secondary College Cleaning Melbourne
Specialist cleaning for Melbourne high schools and secondary colleges. Science laboratory decontamination, technology and workshop room cleaning, change room and locker area sanitation, gymnasium floor care, and full daily maintenance across large multi-building campuses. WorkSafe Victoria chemical hazard compliance for lab areas. WWC-checked named crew, no subcontractors, Department of Education Victoria contractor compliance.
Cleaning Challenges Unique to High Schools
A secondary college is not a scaled-up primary school. The room types, the hazard profile of those rooms, the scale of the campus, the behaviour of the students and the compliance requirements of specific spaces are all fundamentally different — and the cleaning program needs to be designed around these differences rather than adapted from a primary school or commercial office template. A provider that cleans offices and primary schools to a high standard may still be wholly unequipped for a secondary college without the specialist training, equipment and documented protocols the environment requires.
Three categories of challenge set secondary college cleaning apart. Hazardous room content — science laboratories with chemical reagent residue on bench surfaces, technology workshops with combustible dust from woodworking and metal fabrication, drama studios with stage paint and adhesives. High-contamination spaces — change rooms used by 300 to 500 students per week with body-fluid exposure risk, and locker corridors where hundreds of individual metal surfaces are touched daily without hand hygiene. And campus scale — a 1,500-student secondary college may span 6,000 to 10,000 square metres of indoor floor area across six or more separate buildings, requiring a coordinated multi-person cleaning team with a supervisor, not a single cleaner working sequentially through rooms.
Chemical & workshop hazards
Science laboratories used for student practicals may carry reagent residue — dilute acids, alkali solutions, oxidising agents — that requires neutralisation or careful removal before standard cleaning products are applied. Technology rooms accumulate wood dust and metal swarf that can ignite if agitated by standard vacuum equipment. Both room types require cleaning staff with documented training in the specific hazard profile of each space under WorkSafe Victoria guidance for school chemical management.
High-contamination zones
Secondary school change rooms — shared by multiple cohorts of students throughout the day for physical education, sport and after-school activities — carry a body-fluid exposure risk that is significantly higher than any other area in the building. The combination of humidity, skin contact surfaces, bare foot traffic and shared shower facilities creates biological growth conditions that require daily intensive cleaning rather than the lighter daily protocol appropriate for classrooms and corridors.
Campus scale & team management
Melbourne secondary colleges commonly span multiple buildings connected by covered walkways, with separate science and technology blocks, gymnasium and sports facilities, performing arts spaces and administration buildings spread across the site. Cleaning a campus of this complexity requires a team with an assigned building responsibility structure, consistent communication between team members about room access and completion status, and a supervisor who can quality-check across multiple concurrent work areas.
Areas We Clean in Secondary Schools
Every area below requires a different cleaning approach from the standard classroom protocol. The specialist knowledge required for each space is the difference between a cleaning result that meets the school's hygiene, safety and presentation requirements and one that leaves a compliance gap the school's facilities manager will need to address.
Science Laboratories
Science laboratory bench surfaces in secondary schools may carry residue from Year 7–12 practical experiments — dilute hydrochloric or sulfuric acid from titration practicals, sodium hydroxide from preparation experiments, potassium permanganate or other oxidising agents from redox practicals, and biological samples from Year 11–12 biology. The correct cleaning sequence is: visual inspection of the bench for visible chemical residue or spill; neutralisation or removal of identified residue following the relevant Safety Data Sheet; cleaning of the bench with a compatible neutral detergent; and sanitation with a compatible disinfectant. This sequence is documented in Golden Star's secondary school science laboratory cleaning protocol, reviewed against WorkSafe Victoria's guidance for school chemical laboratories and the Hazardous Substances regulations under the Occupational Health and Safety Regulations 2017 (Vic). Under no circumstances is an alkaline cleaning product applied to a bench surface without confirming that no acidic reagent residue is present — the resulting exothermic reaction can cause chemical burns.
Technology & Workshop Rooms
Design and technology rooms in secondary schools produce three types of hazardous dust accumulation: wood dust from hand and machine sawing (combustible at concentrations above approximately 40g/m³ in air, and a respiratory irritant at lower concentrations); metal swarf and grinding dust from metalworking (ignition risk with standard vacuum motors); and resin or fibreglass particulate from materials classes. Standard bag or canister vacuum cleaners with conventional motors cannot be safely used for fine wood or metal dust collection — H-class industrial dust extractors with HEPA filtration are the correct equipment for workshop rooms. Golden Star uses H-class extraction equipment in all secondary school technology rooms and workshop spaces. Flat surfaces, machinery guards and window ledges are wiped with damp microfibre to collect settled dust before floor cleaning, to prevent resuspension into the room air.
Locker Areas & Change Rooms
Secondary school change rooms used for daily physical education classes receive the highest body-fluid exposure load of any space in the building outside the bathrooms. Shower recesses, bench surfaces, floor drains and door handles carry a biological contamination level that requires a daily full clean — not a wipe-down — using a pH-neutral disinfectant applied at the correct concentration and dwell time. Shower recesses require weekly scrubbing of grout lines and floor drains with an alkaline cleaner to manage the biological growth that accumulates quickly in the high-humidity environment. For locker corridor sanitation detail, see the hallway and corridor cleaning page. Bathroom and wet area detail is covered on the bathroom cleaning page.
Gymnasium & Sports Facilities
Secondary school gymnasiums present two distinct floor surface types that require completely different maintenance approaches. Sprung timber floors — standard in multi-purpose gymnasiums — must never be mopped with water applied in excess. Moisture causes board swelling, joint separation and subfloor delamination in sprung floor systems. Cleaning is limited to dry dust-mopping followed by a lightly dampened microfibre pass using a pH-neutral, manufacturer-approved timber floor product applied sparingly. High-speed buffing restores the surface sheen that foot traffic dulls over time. For synthetic or vinyl sports hall flooring — found in many newer secondary school gymnasiums — see the full methodology on the sports hall cleaning page. Gymnasium equipment — weights, benches, rowing machines — are wiped with a GECA-certified low-VOC sanitiser as part of the daily sports facility clean.
High School Cleaning Cost
Secondary college cleaning costs are higher per square metre than primary school rates for three reasons: the room types are more diverse and require more time per room than standard classrooms; specialist rooms such as science labs, workshops and change rooms require trained cleaning staff and dedicated specialist equipment that standard cleaning companies do not carry; and the campus scale of a secondary college requires a supervised multi-person team. The indicative monthly ranges below cover standard nightly cleaning across classrooms, bathrooms, corridors, specialist rooms and common areas on a five-day schedule.
Periodic services — carpet cleaning, floor treatments, window cleaning, deep cleaning of science labs and kitchen areas — are agreed and priced at contract commencement as part of the annual maintenance program. All pricing is confirmed in a written quote after the free site visit and room-by-room floor area walk with the facilities manager.
| School type | Student enrolment | Indicative monthly range |
|---|---|---|
| Small secondary college | 300–500 students | $1,200 – $2,500 / month |
| Medium secondary college | 800–1,000 students | $2,500 – $5,000 / month |
| Large secondary college | 1,200–1,800+ students | $4,500 – $9,000+ / month |
| Science lab periodic clean | Per lab, per term | $150 – $300 per lab |
| Change room deep clean | Per visit, quarterly | $200 – $500 |
| Technology room clean (H-class) | Per room, per term | $120 – $250 per room |
All prices exclude GST and are indicative only. Written quote confirmed after free site visit.
What affects secondary college cleaning cost?
Free site visit · Written quote within 24 hours · No lock-in first term
Compliance documentation: Science laboratory cleaning records, workshop dust extraction service logs and change room inspection reports are maintained as part of the Golden Star secondary college service record and are available to the school's facilities manager and WorkSafe Victoria on request.
Frequently Asked Questions
Three factors: hazardous room content requiring trained cleaning protocols (science labs with chemical reagent residue, technology workshops with combustible dust); high-contamination spaces with body-fluid exposure risk (change rooms used by 300–500 students per week); and campus scale requiring a coordinated multi-person team across multiple buildings. A primary school or commercial office cleaning approach applied to a secondary college leaves compliance gaps in all three categories — the science laboratory protocol alone requires documented chemical hazard awareness that no general commercial cleaning provider carries.
The sequence is: visual inspection of the bench for chemical residue before applying any cleaning product; neutralisation or removal of identified residue following the relevant Safety Data Sheet; cleaning with a compatible neutral detergent; and sanitation with a compatible disinfectant. Applying an alkaline cleaning product to a bench with acid reagent residue causes an exothermic reaction — this is why the inspection step is non-negotiable. The protocol is documented and reviewed against WorkSafe Victoria guidance for school chemical laboratories and the Occupational Health and Safety Regulations 2017 (Vic).
Secondary school change rooms used daily for physical education require a full clean every school day — floor disinfection, bench wipe, shower recess scrub where present, bins emptied, dispensers restocked. Weekly grout line and drain surround scrubbing manages the biological growth that accelerates in high-humidity change room conditions. Quarterly deep cleaning of locker interiors and replacement of wet area matting rounds out the annual program. The daily clean must be a full sanitation pass, not a surface wipe — the contamination load in a change room used by 200 or more students per week makes the distinction critical.
A medium-sized Melbourne secondary college (800–1,000 students) on a five-night schedule typically starts from $2,500 to $5,000 per month. Larger secondary campuses with 1,200 or more students and multiple specialist buildings start from $4,500 per month. Specialist periodic services — science lab cleans, workshop H-class extraction cleans, change room quarterly deep cleans — are separately priced and confirmed at contract commencement. Visit the pricing page for a full breakdown, or request a quote after the free site visit and floor area walk.
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