On any project inside an occupied healthcare facility, infection control is not a line item. It is the constraint everything else works around. We handle ICRA barrier construction Class I through IV, and our on-staff epidemiologist reviews and signs the assessment before demolition begins.
What ICRA work involves
- ICRA Class I to IV barrier construction. Scoped to the risk level of the work and the patient population next to it.
- Negative air containment and HEPA filtration. Pressure-monitored, with documentation.
- Anteroom design and construction. For Class III and IV work where personnel and material transfer is controlled.
- STARC modular containment walls. Our crews are fully trained on the full STARC wall line, and we offer it on every job. The panels go up faster than stick-built barriers, seal cleaner, generate less dust and noise on an occupied floor, and come down without demolition debris.
- Pre-construction risk assessment documentation. The paperwork your facility’s infection-control committee and the GC both need on file.
- Clearance sign-off. Our epidemiologist reviews the containment plan and signs off on clearance at the end.
Standards we align to
Our protocols align with CDC guidance, the AIA Guidelines for Design and Construction of Hospitals, and Joint Commission environment-of-care standards. We work in occupied hospitals, surgical centers, dental offices, urgent care, and clinics without disrupting clinical operations.
Why the epidemiologist matters here
On most projects, the GC or facility sources infection-control oversight separately from the contractor doing the physical work. Two vendors, two contracts, a coordination gap. The epidemiologist who signs your ICRA works for the same firm building the barriers. One contract, one point of accountability, and the documentation holds up if it is questioned later.
Talk to us
Active infection-control scope or an RFP in hand? Email the bid invite, or call the specialized line for same-day discussion.