Pre-Engineered Fire Suppression Systems for Targeted Hazard Protection
Are Your High-Risk Areas Properly Protected?
Commercial kitchens, paint booths, and specialized equipment areas present fire risks that traditional sprinklers aren’t designed to control. Codes and insurance carriers often require dedicated suppression systems to protect these hazards—yet improper installation or neglected maintenance can lead to failed inspections, business interruptions, and serious safety risks.
Summit Fire & Security helps you stay compliant and protected with professionally installed and maintained pre-engineered suppression systems designed for your specific hazards and operating conditions.
Support Across the Life of Your System
System Design & Installation
Pre-engineered systems must be properly selected, configured, and installed to perform correctly. Our technicians follow manufacturer specifications and applicable codes to ensure systems activate quickly and effectively when needed.
- Commercial kitchen hood suppression in restaurants, cafeterias, and institutional kitchens
- Paint booth and spray finishing systems suppression for flammable vapors and combustible coatings in manufacturing and finishing environments
- Industrial machinery and process equipment protection for production equipment, conveyors, generators, and high-heat machinery
- Clean-agent enclosure systems for electrical rooms, IT closets, and other sensitive equipment spaces
- Food truck fire suppression systems for mobile cooking operations
Inspection, Testing, & Maintenance
- Scheduled inspections per NFPA and local requirements
- Functional testing of detection and actuation components
- Agent level verification and system resets
- Detailed service records for compliance
System Service & Repairs
- Replacement of discharged or expired agents
- Repair of detection and release components
- System troubleshooting and corrective repairs
- Coordination with AHJs following activations
System Upgrades & Retrofits
- System modifications for equipment changes
- Upgrades to meet new code or insurance standards
- Replacement of obsolete components
- Coordination with facility renovations