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Recent News

Life After COVID-19: How Our Experts View HVAC Design Systems and Contaminants in a Coronavirus World

Tri-Tech has been asked, as a design team providing mechanical-engineering services, to provide opinions and recommendations for multiple clients on how facility HVAC systems can have an impact on the spread of viruses, such as COVID-19. So, we wanted to address ways an HVAC-system design and related air-ventilation products could help address COVID-19-related concerns.

While much of the specific data related to air-ventilation products as of late has yet to be corroborated, we can help you consider what may be the most appropriate utilization for your facility.

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Staying Committed: Tri-Tech Engineering and the Greene County Parks and Trails Facility Addition

“The task that lies before the Greene County Parks and Trails (GCP&T) is no small one. Their team maintains twenty-seven parks throughout the Greene-County area—including the more-than 4,500 miles of paved trails, making it the country’s largest. Each year, thousands of bikes, rollerblades, and baby walkers roll along these winding trails and hike the parks’ rolling hills. So maintaining care for it all requires exceptional commitment. And if there’s one thing the team at GCP&T don’t lack, it’s commitment to their parks.”

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The Structural Engineering of Value: Tri-Tech and SWEMCO’s Addition

“In early March, COVID-19 forced civic and industry leaders to make swift decisions to preserve public health. Hospital hallways filled with patients as classrooms, office buildings, and restaurants emptied following stay-home orders from state leaders across the country. For the next weeks, only those industries and workers deemed ‘essential’ to America’s infrastructure remained open. Along with grocery stores—and their empty toilet-paper aisles—pharmacies, and banks, some construction companies and their projects maintained momentum. And in Moorefield, New Jersey, construction continued for SWEMCO Electronics and Manufacturing’s new facility, a project served by Tri-Tech Engineering.”

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Mark Kessler, Manager of Forensics, Retires; Roger Butler to Step into Role

“For nearly three decades, Tri-Tech Engineering has supplied forensics-engineering services. Mark Kessler (PE, 1992), for more than a third of that time, has overseen and facilitated Tri-Tech’s forensic-investigative services, serving Tri-Tech’s many clients with the company’s relational focus and emphasis on being “built on integrity.” At the end of November, Kessler will transition from his role as manager of forensics to celebrate his retirement after 28 years as a professional engineer.”

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Expertise and Care: Tri-Tech Engineering Embodies 4-H Founder's Mission for Building Renovation and Modernization

“The A. B. Graham building houses many city and county offices and courtrooms. After years of maxing out the building’s capacity and capabilities, Clark County leadership knew the building needed improvements if it were to continue to serve a critical and strategic function in the city of Springfield. Clark County sought to elevate the building’s functionality and to improve its utility provisions—while preserving its important historical aesthetic—through a significant renovation-and-modernization project. And with their own expertise and care, Tri-Tech Engineering’s team sought to protect the owner’s commitments to the building’s image while ensuring the building could enjoy a successful renovation.”

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Tri-Tech Engineering Announces Daniel Garman as New President

“Centerville, Ohio – As 2019 drew to a close, Tri-Tech’s managing principals Bob Thomson and Mark Stemmer announced that Tri-Tech team member and electrical engineer Daniel Garman would assume the role of president effective January 2020. This announcement is accompanied by Bob Thomson continuing as CEO and transitioning into his new role as president emeritus.”

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Tri-Tech Unit Tie-Downs Withstand Dayton Tornadoes

“In Beavercreek, Ohio, an economic hub for the Dayton area, an EF2 unleashed wind gusts upwards of 135 mph. Businesses’ owners discovered their properties with collapsed roofs, blown-out windows, caved-in walls, and missing fixtures, such as awnings, lighting, and HVAC units. In the midst of the devastation, as seen in the picture from a news camera, a local business found its rooftop units relatively undisturbed. Despite the sheer force of the EF2, these units remained fastened to the roof as a result of Tri-Tech’s design.”

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