Project Details:
- Roof Replacement
- Installation of New Food Processing Equipment
- FEMA-level, 356 Seismic Upgrade
Called in to fix a leaky roof, Milroy identified a problem. Painstakingly replacing sections of the roof in 10x10 sections, while providing protection from all debris, Milroy successfully replaced the roof without incident while the factory continued production.
Milroy also partnered with Degenkolb structural engineers in San Francisco for Ghirardelli’s FEMA-level, 356 Seismic Upgrade—a five-phase, design/build project.
Construction has already been completed on a huge steel frame on the outside of the building, which is just part of the plan to reinforce the company’s roofs and buildings to bring the structures up to code.
Scheduled to finish in 2012, all work is being performed in Ghirardelli’s occupied, fully-functioning facilities.
Project Details:
- Architectural Upgrades
- Roof Repair
- Structural Upgrades
- Tool fit-up and hook-up
- Class 10 Cleanroom Environment
Milroy demolished 500 square feet of overhead hepa bank filters, then prepped the space with 400 feet of raised flooring to accept a new solar panel tool, all while maintaining cleanroom protocol and with no disruption to the existing lab.
Milroy also installed various CMP tools in another AMAT class 10 cleanroom environment, on an extremely tight time schedule. This job required precise accuracy in order to lay out six steel pedestals and place them into a raised floor to support the tool’s feet. The tool was then anchored, the field measured, and seismic restrains fabricated. Lastly, the cleanroom walls were modified around the tool’s factory interface.
Project Details:
We are currently working on-site at this project, and will update you on the progress shortly. To coin a phrase, this page is quite literally “under construction!”
Project Details:
- Facilities maintenance
- Finish & Custom Carpentry
- ADA upgrades
- Design/build projects
- TI Projects
- Architectural Restoration Projects
Working in occupied buildings, laboratories and classrooms, Milroy has completed numerous design/build projects, tenant improvement projects and upgrades.
Milroy was also called in to restore the finishes on the historic Hanna House on the Stanford campus, originally designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1936. After an exhaustive search through the Bay Area, Milroy located and obtained the best quality old growth redwood available that would match the existing finishes. Partnering with out-of-state experts and consultants, Milroy rebuilt the worn and damaged exterior, restoring it to its former luster.
Project Details:
We are currently working on-site at this project, and will update you on the progress shortly. To coin a phrase, this page is quite literally “under construction!”
Project Details:
- Structural upgrades
- New laboratory construction
- Cleanroom construction
- Waterproofing
- TI Build-out
Milroy’s work at IBM has ranged from structural upgrades, to office remodels to new laboratory construction.
Project Details:
- Structural upgrades
- New laboratory construction
- Cleanroom construction
- Waterproofing
- TI Build-out
Milroy was also contracted for a highly complex job at the Silicon Valley Lab campus in San Jose to install a new waterproofing membrane that would tie into existing building expansion joints located directly over the data center. Because the data center remained fully operational during construction, Milroy took multiple precautions to install a series of temporary barriers and diversions to protect the highly sensitive computer environment from water intrusion.
Project Details:
We are currently working on-site at this project, and will update you on the progress shortly. To coin a phrase, this page is quite literally “under construction!”
Project Details:
We are currently working on-site at this project, and will update you on the progress shortly. To coin a phrase, this page is quite literally “under construction!”
Project Details:
We are currently working on-site at this project, and will update you on the progress shortly. To coin a phrase, this page is quite literally “under construction!”
Project Details:
- Cleanroom Class 100
- Retrofitting of Tools
Milroy was hired to cut through the concrete floor inside a class 100 cleanroom in order to allow Perkin Elmer to install a new tool.
The team began the process by setting up a double barrier tent into the room from an outside, adjacent hallway. Next, a pressurized, filtered exhaust system was installed to pull air through the workspace to prevent contamination to the cleanroom while the work was completed.
Interestingly, Perkin Elmer hired an outside third party to take particulate readings before and after Milroy’s work. After the job was finished, the readings revealed that the work area had a lower particulate reading than before construction began.