From emergency power to fire suppression — full-spectrum NFPA compliance consulting, remediation, and software for facilities that cannot afford to fail an inspection.
Seven NFPA standards, one consulting relationship. Every standard your facility is surveyed against.
The problem isn't that facility managers don't care about compliance. It's that NFPA standards are dense, AHJ interpretations vary by region, and the documentation burden falls on people who are already running a building full-time.
When the surveyor walks in, the only thing standing between you and a deficiency citation is a paper trail. Most facilities don't have it.
Every facility type below has a different surveyor, a different risk profile, and different NFPA standards in play. We know the difference.
Four steps. No surprises.
Tell us about your facility. We'll identify the NFPA standards that apply, flag the most common deficiencies for your facility type, and tell you exactly where you stand before a surveyor does.
We respond to every submission the same business day. If you have an upcoming survey, tell us in the "Biggest Concern" field.
We'll review your facility details and reach out within one business day. If you have an urgent survey situation, call us directly.
If your question isn't here, submit an assessment request and ask us directly.
It depends on your facility type and what systems you have. A hospital with a generator, sprinkler system, fire alarm, and fire pump could be subject to NFPA 110, 25, 72, and 20 — plus NFPA 101 for life safety. We determine which standards apply during the assessment.
They handle the equipment — not the documentation program or the compliance gap analysis. Your generator vendor has a financial interest in recommending service. We are vendor-agnostic and our only interest is your survey outcome.
If you have an upcoming survey, tell us. We prioritize urgent situations. A Phase 1 assessment report is delivered within 72 hours of the site visit. Gap closure timelines depend on what we find.
We primarily serve the Southeast — Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. Remote consulting and documentation program management is available nationwide.
NFPA 110 covers generator-based emergency power supply systems. NFPA 111 covers stored electrical energy systems — battery backup, UPS, and fuel cells used as primary emergency power. Some facilities need both.
A same-day review of your submission, a call to discuss your situation, and — if it makes sense — a site visit and written assessment report. The free assessment is a real engagement, not a sales call. No obligation to engage further.
The cost of a deficiency citation, a corrective action plan, and a follow-up survey is significantly higher than the cost of knowing where you stand today.
No vendor relationships. No conflicts of interest. Independent compliance consulting.