Texas Medical Center (TMC) is the world's largest medical complex. Hospitals, medical office buildings, research facilities, and surrounding healthcare network require ICRA Class III/IV containment, ASHE-aligned protocols, and JCAHO-ready documentation.
TMC (77030, 77054) houses 60+ medical institutions including Memorial Hermann, Houston Methodist, Texas Children's, MD Anderson, and major research facilities. Surrounding medical office buildings, dental clinics, and ambulatory care facilities expand the healthcare footprint.
After Allison 2001 catastrophically flooded TMC institutions, the complex implemented extensive flood mitigation including elevated equipment, submarine doors, and pump systems. Modern TMC water damage events focus on plumbing failures, HVAC chiller events, lab leaks, and pharmacy compounding room issues.
ICRA Class III/IV containment required for any work near active patient care.
Restricted access protocols. Time-critical work coordinated with hospital operations.
USP 797/800 sterility requirements. Specialty containment beyond standard ICRA.
Multi-practice buildings need coordination with each medical practice.
Research material protection, sample preservation, equipment-sensitive drying.
Large medical facility chillers cause widespread water damage when they fail.
ICRA Class III/IV containment with negative pressure HEPA filtration. Standard for any work near active patient care.
Time-critical work in restricted-access surgical and procedure rooms. Coordinated with OR scheduling.
Multi-practice MOB plumbing failures need practice-by-practice coordination.
USP 797/800 sterility standards. Specialty containment for clean rooms.
Research material preservation, sample protection, equipment-sensitive drying.
All TMC water damage requires audit-ready records per JCAHO standards.
ICRA Class III/IV containment. ASHE protocols. JCAHO documentation. Healthcare-trained crews.