After a new hospital wing is built or a renovation wraps up, the real work begins: making sure everything continues to run smoothly. Post-construction maintenance is not just about fixing what breaks. It is about building a plan to take care of your new space and making sure it meets safety and compliance standards long after the contractors leave.
Whether you have just opened a new building or made upgrades to existing systems, how you manage that space in the first few months matters. A strong maintenance plan helps protect your investment, avoid unexpected costs, and keep patients and staff safe.
One of the biggest problems hospitals face after construction is missing or disorganized documentation. You need to know what was installed, where it is located, and what each system needs in terms of upkeep.
As-built drawings and equipment manuals
Warranty information
Service schedules
Vendor contact lists
All of this should be stored digitally in one place where your team can find it quickly, especially during emergencies or inspections.
Do not wait until something breaks to take action. As soon as construction is complete, begin scheduling preventive maintenance (PM) tasks for all new systems and equipment.
This includes:
HVAC systems
Generators and backup power
Fire safety systems
Plumbing and water systems
Specialized medical equipment
A digital platform that automatically tracks PM tasks helps keep your team on schedule. It also builds a service history for each asset, which can be helpful for compliance and capital planning later on.
The hand-off from construction teams to facility teams does not always go smoothly. If your staff was not involved during the design and build phase, they might not know how new systems work or where everything is located.
Take time to train your team on what is new. Walk the site together, review equipment layouts, and set clear responsibilities. Some hospitals use digital floor plans or asset maps to help technicians see exactly what is in each room and how everything connects.
When the people maintaining the building understand how it was built, they can take care of it more effectively.
The first year after construction is often when problems show up. Maybe a system was not installed correctly. Maybe an asset fails sooner than expected. A good reporting dashboard helps you keep track of what is working and what is not.
Look for tools that let you:
Monitor PM completion rates
Track equipment issues
Log warranty claims
Spot trends before they become big problems
This kind of visibility is key to staying ahead of costly repairs and staying compliant with CMS and Joint Commission standards.
New construction is a major investment, and it should last. That is why capital planning should start early, even right after construction ends.
Use your maintenance data to track asset performance and plan replacements. If a piece of equipment keeps breaking or maintenance costs keep going up, it might be time to start budgeting for a replacement. The sooner you know, the more you can plan.
Organize asset and warranty data
Set up preventive maintenance schedules
View digital maps of equipment locations
Track issues in real time
Create reports for audits or leadership
We make post-construction maintenance simple so you can focus on running a safe and efficient hospital.