
Infrastructure intelligence for owners and developers making high-stakes decisions.
The construction industry has accepted a dangerous assumption that uncertainty is unavoidable.

We don't buy it.
Most "unknown" conditions are simply uninvestigated.
Infrastructure decisions require field-verified data, not assumptions, not age-based guesses, and not recommendations from firms who profit from the repair.
We send trade-specific professionals into buildings to investigate infrastructure as it actually exists.
Every assessment is peer-reviewed from both a general contractor and engineering perspective.
We document exactly what we find, even when the truth is inconvenient.
Since we have no stake in the downstream work, clients can trust that our findings reflect reality, not what we hope to sell.

What we evaluate:

Our process:
Real World Data
Most assessments start with drawings and end with assumptions.
Ours start with boots on the ground.
Two Perspectives
Every assessment is reviewed from both a general contractor and engineering perspective.
Construction practicality and technical accuracy, together.
System-Specific Experts
We don't send generalists. Plumbing goes to plumbers.
Electrical goes to electricians. Every system gets the specialist it requires.
Honest Documentation
We report what we find, whether convenient or not.
Clients deserve facts they can act on, not hedged language designed to limit liability.
Unbiased Observation
We don't bid on the work we recommend.
Our findings reflect what the building needs, not what we hope to sell.
Actionable Intelligence
Our reports are built for action.
Clear conditions, clear priorities, and clear costs, so you can plan with confidence instead of assumptions.
What you get:
1. All raw field data — verified, system-specific, documented on-site
2. Report of findings — condition reporting with photo and measurement support
3. Immediate flags — safety concerns, operational issues, code deficiencies
4. Obsolescence and capacity — what's at end-of-life, what's undersized, what's at risk
5. Field drawings and more — markups, sketches, and existing-conditions records
6. Capital planning — reserve-level cost framing to support long-range budgeting