What should I look for in a commercial drywall contractor when planning a build-out in a manufacturing facility?
Choose a commercial drywall contractor that understands live-plant conditions: proven safety record, dust-containment methods, flexible scheduling around production, knowledge of ADA/IBC codes, and in-house trades who can also handle structural steel, electrical control systems integration, and facility maintenance—so you get one accountable partner, minimal downtime, and a compliant finish.
An active manufacturing floor leaves zero room for drywall installers who treat your facility like a typical office remodel. Look for a contractor with an uncompromising safety culture—documented OSHA training, site-specific Job Safety Analyses, and trackable metrics on Vetta or ISNetworld.
Next, request industrial-grade dust control and negative-air setups that keep airborne particles out of sensitive process equipment. Flexible, shutdown-friendly scheduling is just as critical. The best partners stage work at nights or weekends and can mobilize extra manpower when your production window is narrow.
Just as important is technical breadth. Process Equipment and Controls brings turnkey industrial contracting: millwright and rigging services to move machinery before walls go up, custom metal fabrication for fork-guard kick plates, electrical control systems integration for panel relocations, and follow-on industrial maintenance services manufacturing plants rely on.
This single partner approach eliminates finger-pointing between separate drywall, electrical, and equipment-setting crews. Finally, verify code expertise—ADA clearances, FRP sanitary finishes for food zones, and fire-rated assemblies using Armstrong ceilings or USG grid systems—so your new interior passes inspection the first time. By choosing a safety-driven, multi-trade contractor like PEC, you protect uptime, compliance, and your sanity.