The industries we serve span commercial office, healthcare, education, hospitality, industrial, retail, multi-family, and government across metro Atlanta and Georgia. Each vertical within the industries we serve has distinct mechanical scope, code expectations, and reporting requirements — and we adjust our procedural approach to match.
Industries we serve — Class A and B commercial office
First on the list of industries we serve, single-tenant and multi-tenant office towers, business parks, and tenant build-outs make up the largest share of our annual workload. Typical scope: comprehensive air and water balance, post-renovation re-balance, and recurring TAB on multi-asset portfolios.
Industries we serve — healthcare and life sciences
Next, hospitals, surgery centers, MOBs, and lab buildings are an important share of the industries we serve. Higher scope intensity, pressurization mapping for infection control, and stricter procedural documentation. Reference standards include AIA / FGI guidelines in addition to ASHRAE 170.
Industries we serve — education
Additionally, K-12, higher-ed, and dormitory projects round out the academic side of the industries we serve. These projects often combine TAB with IAQ testing and ventilation verification for occupant-protection criteria.
Industries we serve — hospitality, retail, and industrial
Furthermore, hotels, restaurants, big-box retail, and light manufacturing each bring their own dominant comfort and code drivers. Industrial scope within the industries we serve typically includes process-exhaust verification in addition to comfort-system balance.
Talk to us about a project
Send the mechanical drawings and a schedule outline, and you will hear back within one business day with a fixed-price proposal.
Request a proposal Call 800-883-6040
A few notes from doing this work
Schools are different. Classrooms have CO₂ targets, summer projects have tight schedules, and the people who hire us are usually a facility director who doesn’t have time for a long sales process. We get in, do the work, hand over a clean report, and don’t waste their time. Most of our school work happens between mid-June and mid-August. If you’re a principal or facilities lead reading this in March, the time to schedule us is now.
Medical and dental is mostly about pressure. Whether it’s a small dental practice or a hospital wing, the question is the same: is each room at the right pressure relative to the corridor, and is the airflow doing what the sequence says it should? You’d be surprised how often the answer is no — even in spaces that just passed their last inspection.
Data centers are math problems. The cooling load is constant and high, and CRAC units don’t care what the calendar says. We measure delta-T, delta-P at the racks, return temperatures at the units, and bypass losses. Then we tell the operator how much cooling capacity is actually available versus what the nameplate says. The two numbers are rarely the same.
Hospitality is about consistency. A guest in room 412 and a guest in room 1207 should both be comfortable on the same August afternoon. They almost never are. Hotels with cards-in-slot HVAC controls are easier; hotels with PTACs and chronic balance drift are harder. Either way we measure room by room.
Retail and restaurants live and die on make-up air. The exhaust hood is pulling 4,000 CFM. Where’s it coming from? If the answer is “the front door,” your tenants are unhappy and your servers are sweating. We measure make-up air against design and tell you what to change.
What’s the same across every vertical
You hire us because you want a number you can trust. The reason doesn’t matter — code, comfort, contract closeout, capital planning. The number has to be defensible. That means calibrated instruments, trained techs, documented procedures, and a signed report that says exactly what we measured and when.
We don’t have a special version of the work for “easy” clients and a different version for “tough” clients. The job is the job. If anyone’s quoting you a “quick TAB” because the building’s small or simple, ask them what their procedure is. Then call us.

