Large commercial spray foam jobs — warehouses, plants, multi-unit projects, big ag facilities — get scoped differently than a basement. Here's how we do it, and what any building owner or GC should expect from a serious sub.
What a Real Scope Includes
A real scope names the substrate (steel, block, wood, deck type), the assemblies being sprayed, target thickness and R-value per assembly, thermal barrier requirements, site conditions (occupied vs. shell, temperature, access), and the sequencing window in your schedule. If a quote you receive is just a price and a square footage, you're going to have change-order problems.
What We Need From You
Drawings if you have them; dimensions and photos if you don't. Intended use of the building (heated? refrigerated? occupied?), your timeline, and any inspection or spec requirements from the project engineer. With that in hand, we return a written scope and quote within 72 hours.
How Provincial Mobilization Works
For projects at scale, we mobilize anywhere in Ontario. Our rigs are self-contained — material, generation, and crew travel together — so a job in Barrie or Ottawa runs the same as one in Windsor. Mobilization is built into the scope, sequencing is coordinated with your site super, and documentation (WSIB, insurance, application records) is handled before we arrive.
If you have a large project anywhere in the province, send the details through our GC fast-track form and we'll get you a scope within a day.