OVERVIEW
The air in any occupied building is in continuous exchange with contaminants from multiple sources — outdoor air bringing in pollen, particulates, and spores through every ventilation point and infiltration pathway; occupants generating CO₂, biological particles, and VOCs; building materials off-gassing chemicals that accumulate in the indoor environment over time. Remediation addresses what existed in the building at the time it was performed. It cannot address what enters the building after it is complete.
Medical-grade air purification systems fill that gap. Installed as whole-property or zone-specific solutions, these systems run continuously — capturing airborne particles, neutralizing biological contaminants, and filtering chemical compounds before they accumulate to concentrations that affect occupant health or building air quality. For properties in Florida's climate, where high outdoor humidity and biological load create sustained pressure on indoor environments year-round, continuous air purification is not a luxury — it is a practical standard of care.
MEDICAL GRADE VS. CONSUMER GRADE – WHAT THE DIFFERENCE MEANS
Consumer air purifiers filter a percentage of particles passing through a single unit in a single room. Medical-grade systems are engineered for whole-space coverage, designed to handle the air volume of the installation environment, and verified against published CADR ratings and filtration standards. The distinction matters — an undersized or improperly placed unit creates the impression of air purification without achieving the air changes per hour required to maintain meaningful indoor air quality improvement.
True HEPA filtration captures 99.97% of particles 0.3 microns and larger — the standard all systems we install meet
Air changes per hour — the metric we size every installation against to ensure effective whole-space coverage
Continuous operation — air purification only works when it runs consistently, not intermittently
WHO IS THIS FOR
OUR PROCESS
CLIENT REVIEWS
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
SERVICE AREA
EXPLORE MORE
Advanced IAQ testing identifies exactly what contaminants are in your indoor environment — the findings that make air purification system specification precise rather than generic.
Where active contamination sources need to be addressed before a purification system is installed, IAQ remediation eliminates the source — creating the clean baseline that air purification then maintains.
Mold remediation restores the indoor environment to a clean baseline. Air purification installed following remediation provides continuous filtration that protects that outcome long-term.
Air sealing reduces the infiltration load that air purification has to manage — the two services work together to control both the entry of outdoor contaminants and their concentration in the indoor environment.