📍 Headquartered in San Jose, CA and Servicing Northern California

Hotels, Resorts & Event Venues

Renovation That Stays Behind the Scenes While the Guest Experience Stays Front and Center

Construction noise above 70 dBA causes guests to leave hospitality spaces before they have finished what they came to do. Guest rooms need ambient noise below 45 dBA for comfortable sleep. In hospitality, the construction barrier is not just a safety measure. It is a revenue protection tool. 5DCCS modular containment systems keep renovation work discreet, the lobby presentable, and the guest experience uninterrupted throughout the project.

STC-Rated Sound Attenuation ASTM E84 Class A Fire Rated Branded Panel Options Same-Day Quotes SDVOSB & DVBE Certified
45 dBA
Guest Room Sleep Threshold — Target Ambient Noise
70 dBA
When Guests Leave Hospitality Spaces Prematurely
9am–4pm
Recommended Construction Window in Active Hotels
Same Day
Quotes for Most Hotel Projects

The Hospitality Renovation Challenge

A Guest Who Hears Jackhammers or Sees Plastic Sheeting Does Not Come Back

Hospitality renovation differs from every other occupied construction environment in one critical way: the people on the other side of the barrier are paying for an experience. A business traveler trying to sleep through a wall with audible construction has a legitimate complaint and a review platform to express it on. An event planner whose ballroom renovation is visible from the lobby during a competing function has a problem that costs the venue a rebooking. In hospitality, guest perception of the renovation is as important as the renovation itself.

Research on hospitality noise consistently shows that construction noise above 70 dBA causes guests to leave common areas before completing their purpose, before finishing a meal, before concluding a meeting, before checking in without frustration. Guest rooms should target ambient noise below 45 dBA for comfortable sleep. A modular wall with meaningful STC-rated acoustic performance is not a luxury on a hotel project. It is the minimum viable intervention for protecting those thresholds while renovation proceeds.

Professional modular containment wall in active hotel or resort renovation

What the Barrier Communicates to Guests

The Containment Wall Is Guest-Facing. It Needs to Match the Property's Standards.

In a hotel lobby, a clean white modular panel tells guests that the property is investing in something better and that the project is professionally managed. A torn plastic tarp tells a different story. One that ends up in a review. Hospitality properties increasingly require that construction barriers reflect the property's brand standards: clean finish, professional appearance, and no visual disruption to the guest-facing environment. Our panel systems deliver that appearance from the first day of installation, on both sides of the barrier.

For luxury properties, branded graphics and custom panel wraps are available, turning the construction zone boundary into a communication touchpoint that tells guests what is coming and when it opens, rather than just concealing the work behind an anonymous white wall. This is standard practice at major hotel renovations and available on every 5DCCS project that calls for it.

Temporary modular wall installed in active hotel lobby during renovation

Where We Work

Containment for Every Hospitality Renovation Type

From lobby overhauls to floor-by-floor guest room refreshes and ballroom upgrades, every hospitality renovation has its own guest sensitivity, brand standards, and operational continuity requirements. Here is how we support active construction across the full range of hotel and venue settings.

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First Impressions

Lobby & Reception Renovations

The lobby is the first and last impression guests have of a property. Renovation work here cannot look chaotic. Our clean-finish panel systems maintain a professional, polished appearance on the guest-facing side from day one, keeping the check-in experience intact while the renovation proceeds behind the barrier. For luxury properties, branded wraps are available to communicate the project's vision rather than simply concealing the work.

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Sleep Quality

Guest Floor & Room Corridor Renovations

Floor-by-floor renovations require containment that prevents construction noise from reaching occupied guest rooms above, below, and adjacent to the work zone. Best practice in hotel renovation calls for buffer zones of unoccupied rooms surrounding active renovation areas to serve as acoustic buffers — and limiting noisy construction to the 9 AM to 4 PM window that minimizes disruption during guest peak morning and evening periods. Our STC-rated systems maximize attenuation within that window.

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Revenue Spaces

Restaurant, Bar & Food & Beverage Expansions

Restaurant and bar renovations in active hotels must maintain the dining atmosphere in adjacent spaces while construction proceeds behind the barrier. Our containment systems reduce noise transmission into neighboring dining areas, prevent construction dust from reaching food prep or service areas, and maintain the clean visual environment that restaurant guests expect — even when a kitchen expansion or bar build-out is happening 30 feet away.

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Event Operations

Ballroom, Conference Center & Event Space Upgrades

Event spaces present a scheduling challenge unique to hospitality: renovation must often proceed between booked events, with rapid installation and removal to maintain the venue's event calendar. Our modular systems install and remove in a single day, allow the event space to be ready for the next booking on schedule, and can be configured around complex ballroom layouts that require phased, section-by-section renovation to avoid canceling revenue-generating events.

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Quiet Zones

Spa, Wellness & Fitness Facility Upgrades

Spa and wellness areas are defined by quiet and calm. Construction noise reaching a treatment room or relaxation lounge creates an immediate guest complaint and a likely refund request. Our sound-dampening panel options provide meaningful acoustic separation for renovation adjacent to active spa and wellness spaces, allowing facility upgrades to proceed without the noise penetration that would make adjacent services undeliverable.

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Amenity Spaces

Pool Areas, Fitness Centers & Common Area Upgrades

Pool deck renovations, fitness center expansions, and common area upgrades in active resorts require containment that works in environments with high humidity, chlorine off-gassing, and continuous foot traffic from guests in casual attire. Our systems maintain their structural integrity in these conditions, provide clear delineation between active amenity zones and construction areas, and remove completely at project close without the adhesive residue or surface damage that conventional barriers often leave.

The Standards and Obligations That Govern Hotel & Venue Construction

Hospitality renovation is governed by the same building code, fire code, and ADA requirements that apply in any commercial occupied building, but with an additional layer of brand standards, franchise requirements, and guest satisfaction obligations that most other construction environments do not face. A hotel brand's property improvement plan (PIP) frequently specifies construction standards including barrier appearance requirements, work hour limitations, and noise thresholds that GCs must meet to maintain brand certification.

The primary regulatory concern in hospitality construction is the same as any occupied public assembly building: fire egress must be maintained, barriers in egress paths must carry the ASTM E84 Class A fire rating, and ADA-compliant paths must be preserved throughout the renovation. But for a hotel operator, the practical concern goes further: a guest who is blocked from an accessible route, startled by an unmarked barrier, or awakened at 6 AM by drilling has a complaint that does not require a regulatory violation to be costly.

STC Acoustic Performance — Guest Room Thresholds Guest rooms should target ambient noise below 45 dBA for comfortable sleep. Construction noise above 70 dBA in common areas causes guests to leave before completing their purpose. STC-rated modular panels reduce transmitted construction noise meaningfully — the panel specification should match the acoustic sensitivity of the adjacent guest space.
Construction Work Hour Restrictions Standard practice in hotel renovation limits noisy construction to 9 AM to 4 PM to minimize disruption during guest peak morning and evening periods. High-noise and high-dust activities — core drilling, demolition, heavy HVAC work — should be scheduled to avoid breakfast service, evening check-in peaks, and any active event programming in adjacent spaces.
ASTM E84 Class A — Fire Rating Required for barriers in occupied public assembly buildings including hotel lobbies, corridors, and event spaces. All panels in our systems carry Class A ratings for flame spread and smoke development. Plastic sheeting does not meet this standard and cannot be used in hotel egress paths or occupied common areas.
Brand Franchise PIP Requirements Most major hotel brands (Marriott, Hilton, Hyatt, IHG) specify minimum standards for construction barriers in their Property Improvement Plan documentation. These typically require professional-appearance barriers, work hour limitations, and dust control measures. Our systems meet the clean-finish appearance requirements these franchise standards specify.
ADA Accessibility — Guest Routes Temporary routes around construction zones must maintain ADA-compliant accessible paths — minimum 36-inch clear width, no protrusions, stable surface throughout the project. This includes paths to guest rooms, event spaces, dining areas, and all public amenities. We account for accessible route requirements at the layout design stage.
NFPA 101 — Life Safety & Egress Emergency egress paths in hotels must remain clearly marked, unobstructed, and at full required width throughout construction. Hotels operating around the clock — including overnight guests — have zero tolerance for egress path blockage. Barrier configurations are reviewed for egress compliance before any installation proceeds.

What Plastic Sheeting Cannot Do in a Guest-Facing Hospitality Environment

Plastic sheeting is inexpensive and looks it. In a hotel lobby, a restaurant, or a resort common area, the barrier is visible to every guest from the moment they arrive. Here is what modular walls provide that plastic sheeting cannot.

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Professional Appearance That Matches the Property's Standard

Our clean-finish panels present a polished surface on the guest-facing side from day one of installation. For luxury properties and brand-standard hotels, panels accept applied graphics, branded wraps, and project messaging that communicate the renovation's purpose rather than just concealing it. This is the difference between a barrier that reinforces the property's quality commitment and one that undermines it.

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STC-Rated Acoustic Performance That Protects Guest Satisfaction

Plastic sheeting transmits nearly all construction noise to the other side. Our STC-rated panel systems reduce transmitted noise meaningfully — the difference between a guest who notices a renovation is happening and one whose stay is disrupted by it. For guest room floor renovations, our highest-STC options are the appropriate specification when renovation must proceed during occupied periods.

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ASTM E84 Class A Fire Rating in 24-Hour Occupied Properties

Hotels operate around the clock with sleeping guests. Barriers in corridors, lobbies, and egress paths must carry the ASTM E84 Class A fire rating that life safety codes require in occupied public assembly buildings. All panels in our systems are Class A rated — the standard your fire marshal will enforce and your insurance carrier will ask about.

Same-Day Installation Without Disrupting Event Operations

Our installation generates zero dust and zero debris — critical when it is happening in a lobby where guests are checking in or a corridor where rooms are occupied. For event venues working around a booked calendar, same-day installation and same-day removal allow renovation to advance between events without the venue losing booked revenue to accommodate a construction setup and teardown window.

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Reconfigurable as Renovation Phases Move Through the Property

Multi-phase hotel renovations — floor by floor, wing by wing, or section by section — need containment that relocates as each phase completes. We reconfigure without demolition, keeping the guest-facing environment clean and the construction disruption to the smallest possible zone at any given time. No drywall demolition event in the middle of a guest floor. No debris haul-off through the lobby.

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Zero Demolition Debris at Project Completion

When renovation is complete, panels are removed and reused on the next project. No drywall to demolish, no debris to haul through the lobby, no cleanup left for housekeeping before the restored space opens to guests. For properties with sustainability commitments, the elimination of single-use construction materials supports those goals in a way that conventional containment methods cannot.

From First Call to Final Removal in 5 Steps

We make containment straightforward. Most setups complete in a single day, with no mess left behind on either side of the wall.

1

Consultation & Site Assessment

We review your scope, timeline, and compliance needs from drawings or a site walk.

2

Custom Containment Plan

We design a layout with door placement, negative air ports if needed, and multi-phase sequencing.

3

Delivery & Installation

Our crew delivers and installs. Most setups finish in a single day. Clean and professional on both sides.

4

Ongoing Support & Adjustment

Projects change. If your layout needs to shift or expand, we handle it without rebuilding from scratch.

5

Removal & Closeout

When work is done, we remove everything. No demolition dust, no debris, no cleanup left for your team.

Renovating a Hotel, Resort, or Event Venue?

Most quote requests receive a response within one business day. Tell us your property type, your renovation scope, your event calendar, and your brand standard requirements, and we will put together a containment plan that protects the guest experience throughout the project.

SDVOSB Certified DVBE Certified SBE Certified DBE Certified

Hospitality Containment Questions

Not finding what you need? Call us at (855) 684-3752 or use the contact form — we are happy to talk through your project before you commit to anything.

Yes — and for most hotel operators, closing is not financially viable. Renovation in an active hotel is about managing guest perception, not eliminating the renovation. With proper containment, guests in unaffected areas of the property experience a normal stay. The key decisions are: which panels to specify based on the acoustic sensitivity of adjacent guest spaces, what time window construction activities are permitted in, and how many buffer rooms to leave unoccupied around the active renovation zone. We work with your GC and hotel operations team to align all three.
That depends on the STC rating of the panel specified and the intensity of the construction activity. Our panel systems range from STC 21 to STC 40+. One STC point is approximately equivalent to one decibel of noise reduction — so an STC 35 panel reduces transmitted noise by approximately 35 dB. If a construction activity generates 85 dBA inside the containment zone, an STC 35 system transmits approximately 50 dBA to adjacent spaces — below the level where guest room sleep disturbance typically occurs. For renovation adjacent to occupied rooms, we recommend specifying our highest-STC options and scheduling the loudest activities during the recommended 9 AM to 4 PM hotel construction window.
Yes. Our clean-finish panel surfaces accept applied graphics, branded vinyl wraps, and project messaging. For major hotel brands with franchise standards that specify barrier appearance, we can coordinate with your marketing or design team to produce graphics that reflect the property's brand identity. Construction messaging — "We are refreshing our lobby," "Opening Spring 2026," or similar — turns the construction zone into a guest communication touchpoint rather than an anonymous barrier. This is available on any 5DCCS project that calls for it and is standard practice at luxury and full-service property renovations.
Event calendar coordination happens at the design stage, not after installation. When we learn that a ballroom renovation has booked events on the calendar, we design the containment phasing around those dates — sequencing construction into sections that allow specific event spaces to be clear on the days they are booked. In some cases, this means barriers are in place between events and temporarily reconfigured for event access. Our modular systems accommodate this kind of rapid reconfiguration in ways that drywall or built-in-place barriers cannot. For event venues with complex calendars, we recommend a detailed phasing conversation before any installation planning begins.
Yes. All panels in our systems carry an ASTM E84 Class A rating for both flame spread and smoke development — the fire standard required for barriers in occupied public assembly buildings including hotel lobbies, corridors, and egress paths. Hotels operate 24 hours with sleeping guests, making fire egress integrity non-negotiable at any hour. Plastic sheeting does not meet this standard and cannot be legally used in hotel corridors or lobby egress paths. We can provide panel fire rating documentation for your fire marshal or building engineer if needed during permit or inspection review.
Yes. Our systems use floor tracks and ceiling connectors or braced top tracks that anchor without adhesives or fasteners that damage existing finishes. At removal, panels and tracks come out leaving no residue and no surface damage — a particularly important consideration in hotels where existing flooring, millwork, and wall finishes represent significant capital investment. We review existing finish conditions during the site assessment to confirm the appropriate anchoring method before installation begins.
Yes. Full-service rental includes delivery, installation, reconfiguration around your event calendar and renovation phasing, and clean removal at project completion. Self-service rental is available for hotel operators or GCs with in-house installation capability. System purchase makes sense for hotel management companies, large resorts with recurring renovation programs, or GCs doing ongoing PIP work across multiple properties — the per-project cost drops substantially once the inventory is owned and the deployment is faster because panels are already on-site.