Healthcare

We live and breathe healthcare.

With over 23 years of experience in healthcare, we know it is one of the most technically demanding and operationally sensitive sectors to build and maintain. We work inside live operational environments where clinical services cannot stop – and where the wellbeing of patients and medical staff is always front of mind.

Partnership drives our process. We engage early – with NHS trusts, clinical teams, and specialist supply chain partners who understand these environments as well as we do. Working closely with their expertise alongside our own, we agree detailed programmes and resolve coordination challenges well before they reach site.

We’ve built a practice capable of handling the complexities of healthcare facilities– digitally precise, offsite efficient, and designed from the ground up for clinical environments. From operating theatres and cancer centres to critical care units and acute ward refurbishments, it’s the field we know best and will continue to be most deeply rooted in, now and for years to come.

Key Stats

Years of healthcare experience:

23+

Value of M&E healthcare projects delivered:

£200m+

Number of healthcare projects delivered:

40+

Largest M&E Project:

£28m

Key Trends

The healthcare sector is navigating a demographic shift: the growing need of ageing populations. This shift is requiring technology-intensive diagnostics, continuous monitoring, and coordinated care – all placing an unprecedented strain on existing infrastructure.

M&E is now front and centre in the design and delivery of healthcare infrastructure – as these trends intensify, the complexity and criticality of the M&E systems required to meet them continues to grow. 

We view the following trends as fundamental drivers of the future of healthcare infrastructure and the increasing complexity of the M&E systems within it:

Increasing digitalisation and smart infrastructure are redefining healthcare facilities, requiring closer integration between building systems and clinical technologies to support patient outcomes.

Increasing digitalisation and smart infrastructure are redefining healthcare facilities, requiring closer integration between building systems and clinical technologies to support patient outcomes.