Industrial

Engineering for process and performance. 

Industrial and manufacturing environments are process-first by nature – placing some of the most demanding requirements on mechanical and electrical engineering. High-specification infrastructure, mission-critical controlled environments, and high-power systems leave little margin for error – with precision, uptime, and compliance engineered in from the outset. 

We work closely with clients, embedding ourselves early within the design process to ensure that M&E systems are engineered around the operational demands of a facility – not retrofitted around them. In this sector, process defines the design. 

We have delivered complex M&E packages across a broad range of industrial and manufacturing facilities, from advanced processing plants to high-specification logistics and production environments. Our breadth and depth of experience across complex, process-driven and mission-critical environments – including pharmaceutical and life sciences – has shaped how we design, deliver, and maintain; for today’s demands and tomorrow’s ambitions.

Key Stats

Years of experience in sector: 

30+

Largest single manufacturing project: 

£55m

Manufacturing Projects delivered: 

15+

Total value of manufacturing M&E projects delivered: 

£85m+

Key Trends

Advanced manufacturing and processing facilities place significant demands on the built environment, driven by process precision, regulatory complexity, and increasingly compressed delivery timelines. As these demands continue to evolve, so too must the infrastructure that supports them.  

M&E systems are fundamental to how the industry responds to these trends, from delivering safe, high-performance process infrastructure to embracing the integrated delivery methods that are reshaping how we build. As complexity grows, so too does the criticality of M&E. 

We see the following trends as fundamental drivers shaping the future of industrial infrastructure, and the growing complexity of the M&E systems required to support it: 

Growing geopolitical tensions are forcing manufacturers to rethink material inputs and facility location, with supply chain security and domestic processing capacity now central to investment decisions.​ 

Growing geopolitical tensions are forcing manufacturers to rethink material inputs and facility location, with supply chain security and domestic processing capacity now central to investment decisions.​