New Equipment Installations

Install work inside operating plants—scoped clearly, executed clean, and coordinated like maintenance expects.

Plant-experienced trades Mechanical + electrical Clean closeout

Installing new equipment inside an operating plant sounds simple—until it isn’t.

AIM handles industrial equipment installation the way maintenance teams expect it to be handled: scoped clearly, coordinated with operations, and executed by people who understand plants. We’re not a greenfield construction outfit, and we’re not a turnkey process-line integrator. We are very good at installing machines, skids, and process additions without creating downstream problems.

The Kinds of Install Projects We Take On

We support equipment installs and upgrades inside existing facilities, including:

  • Individual machines and skids
  • Replacement equipment (like-for-like or upgraded)
  • Equipment additions and process additions (adding tanks, rollers, conveyors, utilities, etc.)
  • Ancillary systems that support existing production
  • Utility tie-ins required to make new equipment operational

If it’s an install inside a running facility and it doesn’t require building an entire line from scratch, it’s likely a fit.

Mechanical Scope

Our mechanical work is performed with startup and long-term maintainability in mind—not just “getting it bolted down.”

  • Equipment setting, anchoring, and fit-up
  • Alignment support and mechanical readiness
  • Welding and fabrication for compressed air, water/process utilities, steam/condensate, and general plant piping modifications

We coordinate sequencing so mechanical work, piping, and electrical don’t fight each other—or operations.

Electrical Scope

AIM performs plant electrical installation work for typical equipment tie-ins and distribution needs, including common 480V three-phase systems.

  • Power feeds and branch circuits
  • Disconnects and local isolation
  • MCC and panel tie-ins
  • Equipment power hookups
  • Grounding and bonding for new equipment

Plant-focused electrical work—done by people who live in MCCs and production areas, not commercial electricians learning industrial systems on the fly.

How We Run Install Work

  • Defined scope (no fuzzy handoffs)
  • Planned around production constraints and access windows
  • Coordination with your team and other trades
  • Clean execution and clean closeout
  • Documentation that makes sense to maintenance

If we see a risk—clearance issues, power limitations, access problems—we surface it early. No surprises at startup.

Where We Draw the Line

We don’t present ourselves as a turnkey EPC for full process lines, a greenfield construction contractor, or a controls-house for complex PLC/HMI development. That clarity keeps expectations aligned and projects efficient—and it protects you from scope creep and surprise handoffs.

Next Step

For installation work, the right starting point is a site visit to scope the job. We’ll confirm access, utilities, and constraints, then give you a realistic plan and price.