OCS ENGINEERING SECURES CONTRACT FOR CARE OF LANDMARK CITY CORPORATE OFFICES
May 04, 2007 (PRLEAP.COM) Business News
OCS Engineering, the engineering and technology support division of the UK’s leading property support services group OCS, has been awarded the renewed contract for the care of full HVAC services for Senator House in Queen Victoria Street in the City of London.Senator House was named in recognition of the ancient roman bath house which lies underneath the prestigious London address. The high-tech 20,000 m2 building is home to a number of blue chip organisations including international law firm Eversheds and the Commonwealth Bank of Australia. The contract places responsibility on OCS Engineering for ensuring its occupiers benefit from the advanced building management technology it utilises. The on-site OCS team will manage BMS, water services, chiller plant, heating and ventilation, drainage and power factor correction.
‘The safe and reliable supply of these services is crucial to the continuous operation of some of the UK’s most prestigious organisations,’ said Richard Burl, managing director of OCS Engineering. ‘We won this three year contract after a highly competitive tendering process and we believe our track record for professionalism, attention to detail and end-to-end engineering solutions has given the client confidence in our on-site expert team.’
The unique architecural style and commanding location of Senator House dominates Queen Victoria Street. It is owned by Challenger plc, a leading Australian investment company, and managed by Knight Frank.
Chris Cracknell, chief executive of OCS, which employs 61,000 people in four continents, said, ‘This contract demonstrates that delivering consistent, professional support to a client will always be a significant factor in ensuring we build long-term respect from our client base. It is clear that confidence in our engineering expertise is crucial when businesses rely on critical building services support and our engineering team is to be congratulated.’