Engineering systems inspection
An engineering systems inspection is needed when clarity matters: what actually works, where the bottleneck is and which remediation plan will deliver results without unnecessary costs. We look holistically: ventilation, heating, DHW/CWS, sewerage and automation — because problems often “spill over” between systems.
What is included
- Ventilation: airflow/balance, pressure, noise, modes and control.
- Heating: uniformity of heating, temperatures, circuit performance and valves.
- Domestic hot water / cold water supply (DHW/CWS): pressure, temperature, recirculation, pumps, leak risks.
- Sewerage: odors, slopes, stack venting, check valves, details.
- Automation: sensors, actuators, scenario logic and settings.
- Coordination: how systems affect each other and why a local fix may not help.
When it is especially useful
After renovation / re-planning
Systems stopped working “like before”: odors, noise, temperature swings appear.
Before handover
You need numbers and a clear list of fixes for the contractor or facility team.
When they treat the symptom
A pump/valve/sensor was replaced, but the issue returns — the cause is systemic.
Result format
- A problem map: where the deviation is, how it is confirmed, likely cause.
- Recommendations with priorities and dependencies: what to do first.
- A list of settings/adjustments that can be done without reconstruction.
- A list of modifications if they are unavoidable (details, routes, equipment).
- Short explanations for non-engineers: why it matters and the expected effect.
- Optional — a follow-up inspection after fixes.
An approach without “fluff”
- We don’t sell unnecessary work: we record facts and propose only required steps.
- We separate “improve quickly” from “do it right” — so you can manage the budget.
- We consider premium requirements: quietness, aesthetics, minimal interference with finishing.
- We work confidentially: NDA is a normal part of the process.
- If needed — we can take on design/installation and bring the system to proper regimes.
- Communication is short: you get a plan, not endless coordination.