As hospitals and health organizations around the world scramble to make space to treat patients with COVID-19, two local businesses have joined forces to present a solution.
Sprung Structures, the Calgary-based modular building company known for erecting disaster relief structures in High River in 2013 and for building Tesla’s Model 3 production facility in California in 20 days, has been overwhelmed with calls this week.
“We’re getting calls literally from everywhere,” said Jim Avery, vice-president of Sprung Structures. “Everybody is calling, saying, ‘what can you do, how fast can you ship?’ They are looking for everything from drive-thru testing facilities to hospital beds to auxiliary waiting rooms, even call centres.”
Helping them in the process is Falkbuilt, another Calgary company that outfits structures through digital component construction. In this case, that means filling Sprung structures with things such as hospital beds and ICU units.
“I think we’ve got a good solution. If we could just figure out a few of the unknowns I think it’s a great idea and I’m really excited about the possibilities,” Avery said.
The two companies have been working together for years, but this recent partnership within the health industry allows for an all-in-one approach to what will likely become an increasing concern for hospitals dealing with the virus around the world.
Keep reading in the Calgary Herald
The next publication deadline is Friday at noon
Join Construction Links Network