Media coverage · Industry recognition · Community involvement
Pittsburgh's Tribune-Review covers Joe and Sarah Ferrante as they open Wash at 21 Brilliant Ave in Aspinwall — an eco-certified, PERC-free laundry and dry cleaning business with free pickup and delivery. The origin story of what Wash was built to be and why the Ferrantes chose Aspinwall as home.
Read the article →Pittsburgh's Tribune-Review covers Joe Ferrante's decision to move Duro Cleaners from its longtime McKnight Road location to a new Harmar facility — and the transition to a fully delivery-focused business model. A story about reading the market, serving a community, and evolving without walking away from either.
American Drycleaner, the national trade publication for the dry cleaning industry, features Joe Ferrante as one of the owners shaping how the industry grows and brands itself in a new decade. Topics include delivery expansion, brand building, and what it means to lead a small cleaning business with vision.
When the EPA moved to ban perchloroethylene — the solvent used by most conventional dry cleaners — Pittsburgh's Tribune-Review surveyed the local industry. Wash has never used PERC. While competitors scrambled to respond, Wash had already built its entire operation on SYSTEMK4 — a bio-based, non-toxic alternative — years before the ban.
Read the article →2016 was a year of disruption. I had been working alongside my family inside a partnership — building something, learning the trade, putting in the hours. Then one side of that partnership saw an opportunity to exit. And on their way out, they didn't just leave. They consolidated. What had been a shared enterprise became the largest dry cleaning operation in the Pittsburgh market. I was on the other side of that transaction with a choice to make.
I purchased Duro Cleaners.
What I inherited was a McKnight Road storefront with decades of history, a handful of negative reviews left over from previous ownership, and a PERC machine old enough to order a drink at a bar. I was a very small player in a market that had just gotten a whole lot bigger on one side of it. There was no roadmap. There was no safety net. There was just the business, the bills, and a decision about what kind of operator I wanted to be.
The PERC machine was the first real decision. Perchloroethylene is what most dry cleaners have run on for decades — it's cheap, it cleans, and it's a likely human carcinogen. The EPA has been moving to ban it for years. I made the call to invest in a 100% eco-friendly approach instead. Not because it was easy — it wasn't. It cost more. It required new equipment, new chemistry, a new way of thinking about every garment that came through the door. I chose SYSTEMK4, a bio-based solvent derived from American corn, non-toxic and fully biodegradable. The right decision for the community and the environment, even when it was the harder one for the balance sheet.
All of this happened while I was starting my family. My wife Sarah has been the constant through every hard season this business has put us through. Her support isn't background noise — it's the reason I could make the long bets when everything was uncertain. Together we have two kids. And I'll be honest: being a father changes your relationship with the word "quit." There is no quitting. There is no option to fold. There are two children watching what their father does when things get hard.
Dry cleaning is not a glamorous business. It gets harder every year — costs rise, margins compress, customer expectations grow, and the market doesn't wait for you to catch up. We survived COVID when it nearly wiped us out. We made the decision to go fully delivery-based when the retail model stopped making sense. We moved. We rebuilt. We rebranded as Wash, redid our processes, invested in equipment, and built the systems that would make us better every single day instead of just keeping the lights on.
What drives me forward is simple: what a customer deserves when they trust us with a garment. That trust is not a small thing. A suit that matters. A dress with a story. A shirt that needs to be right. Every item that comes through our door carries someone's expectation that it will come back better than it left. That's the job. That has always been the job.
We are a small business. We are asking you to take a chance on us. If you want to support something local — something built by a Pittsburgh family, with Pittsburgh values, for Pittsburgh people — you are in the right place. The brand is modern. The attention to detail is years in the making. The commitment to quality is not a marketing line. It is the only reason we are still here.
We are the dry cleaner Pittsburgh deserves.
Wash and Duro Cleaners have been covered across local and national outlets over the years. Additional features, podcast appearances, and community mentions will be added here as we archive them.
An interview podcast bridging the gap between industry leaders, entrepreneurs, and business operators — sharing insights, real decisions, and life experiences. Not the highlight reel. Not the TikTok version. What it actually looks like to run a business.
Co-hosted by Joe Ferrante and Jerry Kenna of Landmark Business Solutions. New episodes every week. Over 125 episodes in and still going.
Topics include entrepreneurship, leadership, delegation, accountability, the future of AI, and lessons from nearly two decades of helping Pittsburgh business owners succeed.
Owner of Wash, co-founder of 446 Digital, President of the Riverview Raiders Alumni Association. Pittsburgh native combining business across dry cleaning, manufacturing, and digital marketing.
Founder of Landmark Business Solutions, Paymark Payroll, and Turbo Merchant. Nearly two decades helping Pittsburgh business owners build, scale, and succeed.
After putting Joe in the hot seat last week, the tables turn. Jerry shares the story behind Landmark Business Solutions — from Circuit City to building one of Pittsburgh's most trusted business advisory firms.
Originally operating as Duro Cleaners, Wash traces its roots to 1959 — over six decades of serving Pittsburgh families. The name changed. The commitment to this community never did.
When the EPA moved to ban perchloroethylene in 2024, Wash had already been operating without it for years. Not a reaction — a founding principle. SYSTEMK4 from the start.
Wash operates from the heart of Aspinwall at 21 Brilliant Ave — the same building Joe and Sarah Ferrante invested in as a long-term home for the business and Poured Provisions.
Through 446 Digital, Joe co-created the annual Visibility Scholarship — giving one small Pittsburgh business a full AI marketing package, coaching, and podcast exposure. Wash is a founding donor.
For interview requests, feature inquiries, photo assets, or background on Wash, Joe Ferrante, or the dry cleaning industry in Pittsburgh — reach out directly. We respond to all press inquiries personally.
Wash is available to comment on topics including eco-friendly dry cleaning, PERC alternatives, small business entrepreneurship, and Pittsburgh community business.