MacDonald-Miller featured in Oregon Business Magazine Brand Story:
How a data-driven mechanical contractor is driving tomorrow’s design-build sector.
According to public perception, designers design, builders build and engineers engineer. Plumbers handle plumbing, electricians work with electricity and so on. As one of the Pacific Northwest’s leading design-build mechanical contractors, MacDonald-Miller Facility Solutions (MacMiller) does it all.
Whether designing mechanical systems for new construction projects or retrofitting an existing building, the 50-year-old organization is shaping the industry’s future one better building at a time.
“We do what we do every day as a mechanical contractor to create healthy environments, reduce emissions on this planet and give meaningful data to those who run buildings, so they can be empowered to make smart business decisions,” says Nicole Martin, marketing manager, MacDonald-Miller.
MacMiller helped PeaceHealth Sacred Medical Center at RiverBend run smarter by providing boiler retrofits that saved energy and lowered fuel costs. It now has direct, remote access to the boiler plant via a tablet computer from anywhere in the hospital.
To boost the health of Portland Public Schools, Smart Services modernized Da Vinci Middle School’s mechanical systems and maximized its life-cycle costs. The team installed and integrated the control systems, using a high-performance building automation solution to maintain student comfort and safety.
Since the beginning, the organization has solely employed union technicians because of their guaranteed skill level and high-quality work. With each project — whether a laboratory, health care facility, marine construction or commercial office — that decision has paid off.
In response to the smart building movement, MacMiller is launching a new Smart Building Operations Center with on-call technical experts, while its virtual reality lab, M-Lab, lets clients “walk through” their buildings during the development stage.
As a pioneer in the field, the team — driven by a culture that openly values ‘fun’ — continues to push the envelope of what it means to be a mechanical contractor.
“Today, I can sit on the beach in Hawaii and control my building. That’s already a long way from those old mercury thermostats we used to hang on the wall,” Everett concludes.
“And it’s just going to continue becoming more automated, proactive and predictive.