📍 Headquartered in San Jose, CA and Servicing Northern California

Healthcare & Medical Facilities

Healthcare Containment That Protects Patients During Active Renovation

Construction-related hospital infections are responsible for thousands of preventable deaths in U.S. acute care facilities every year. 5DCCS delivers modular containment systems built to meet ICRA 2.0 requirements — so your renovation moves forward without putting patients at risk.

ICRA 2.0 Class IV & V Ready ASTM E84 Class A Fire Rated HEPA Negative Air Compatible SDVOSB Certified DVBE Certified
1 in 31
Hospitalized Patients Gets an HAI
~72K
U.S. Patients Die from HAIs Annually
5-7%
of HAI Deaths Linked to Construction
$28B+
Annual HAI Cost to U.S. Hospitals

The Wrong Containment Decision Can Cost Patient Lives

When you renovate an occupied hospital, outpatient clinic, or surgical center, you disturb building materials that release Aspergillus spores, bacteria, and airborne particulates into spaces where immunocompromised patients are recovering. Real outbreaks at real hospitals have resulted in patient deaths, multi-million dollar lawsuits, temporary closure of operating rooms, and public statements from hospital leadership acknowledging preventable failures. The risk is not theoretical.

The ASHE ICRA 2.0 framework exists precisely because inadequate containment has a documented and measurable body count. Class IV and Class V precautions require rigid barriers, negative air pressure maintenance, HEPA filtration, and documented inspections. Plastic sheeting does not satisfy these requirements. Drywall takes far too long and generates demolition waste when the renovation moves to the next phase. Modular containment is the only practical solution for active healthcare renovation that balances speed, compliance, and patient safety.

5DCCS provides modular temporary wall systems that meet ICRA 2.0 Class IV and V requirements. We deliver, install, and manage the containment so your general contractor and infection preventionist can focus on the project, not the barrier.

Containment Solutions for Every Healthcare Setting

Healthcare renovation happens across a wide range of environments, each with its own compliance requirements and patient risk profile. Here is how we support active construction across the full spectrum of medical facility types.

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ICRA Class IV–V

Hospital & Inpatient Renovation

Acute care hospital renovations near oncology, ICU, bone marrow transplant, and surgical units carry the highest patient risk classification. Our systems meet ICRA 2.0 Class IV and V requirements, including compatibility with HEPA negative air pressure systems and continuous digital pressure monitoring. We configure door placement, airlocks, and barrier sequencing to match your IP team's containment plan.

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Occupied Facilities

Outpatient Clinics & Ambulatory Surgery Centers

Outpatient facilities often run continuous appointment schedules with limited ability to suspend operations. Our systems install quickly — typically in a single day — and maintain a clean, professional appearance on both sides of the barrier. We design containment that keeps patient pathways clear, meets fire egress requirements, and allows renovation to proceed without disrupting the patient experience in adjacent spaces.

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USP 797 / USP 800

Pharmacy & Compounding Areas

Hospital pharmacies and compounding facilities renovating to meet USP 797 and USP 800 standards require contamination-free construction environments. Our rigid panel barriers isolate the work zone from active pharmacy operations, support HEPA exhaust integration, and maintain the pressure differentials required to protect sterile compounding areas from airborne particulates generated by adjacent construction activity.

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Immunocompromised Populations

Oncology, Transplant & High-Risk Patient Units

Aspergillus and other airborne mold species released during demolition represent a documented lethal threat to immunocompromised patients. When renovation occurs near oncology, hematology, or bone marrow transplant units, Class V containment is standard. Our systems provide the rigid sealed barrier required to prevent spore migration into protected patient zones during even heavy demolition activity.

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Rapid Deployment

Emergency Isolation & Infection Control

When a facility needs to isolate a wing quickly — whether responding to an outbreak, preparing an isolation cohort area, or standing up temporary treatment space — modular containment provides a same-day-capable solution. Our systems can be deployed and reconfigured rapidly, without the cure times and dry times that make drywall impractical for urgent infection control situations.

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Negative Air Systems

Negative Air Pressure & HEPA Integration

Maintaining negative air pressure inside a construction zone prevents contaminated air from flowing into occupied healthcare spaces. Our systems are designed to accept HEPA-filtered negative air machines through sealed panel ports, maintaining the pressure differential that ICRA Class III, IV, and V work requires. We can document system configuration for your IP team's records and Joint Commission review.

Built for the Standards Your Accreditors Require

Healthcare facilities operate under some of the most demanding regulatory frameworks in any construction vertical. The Joint Commission, CMS, ASHE, and the Facility Guidelines Institute each define specific requirements for construction activity in occupied medical settings. Failure to comply can result in immediate Jeopardy-level findings, loss of Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement, civil monetary penalties, and litigation exposure when patient harm results.

Our systems are specified to satisfy the technical requirements of ICRA 2.0 Class IV and V containment, including rigid barrier construction, HEPA-compatible negative air ports, ASTM E84 Class A fire rating, and documentation support for ICRA permit requirements. We provide system specifications to your infection preventionist so your compliance documentation is complete before work begins.

ASHE ICRA 2.0 (2022) The primary framework for construction infection control in healthcare facilities. Class IV and V require rigid barriers, negative air, HEPA filtration, and documented inspections. Our systems are designed to meet these requirements.
The Joint Commission — EC.02.06.05 Requires facilities to manage the risks associated with construction, renovation, and demolition. Non-compliance can trigger Immediate Jeopardy findings and work stoppages.
CMS §482.42 — Infection Control CoP Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services requires hospitals to maintain an active infection control program covering construction and renovation activities.
ASTM E84 Class A — Fire Rating Required for materials used in construction zones within occupied healthcare facilities. Our panels meet Class A flame spread and smoke development standards.
NFPA 241 & NFPA 101 Governs fire safety and life safety during active construction in occupied buildings. Our systems are compatible with Interim Life Safety Measure (ILSM) documentation.
USP 797 / USP 800 Governs sterile compounding environments in hospital pharmacies. Our containment barriers isolate renovation work from active pharmacy operations and support contamination-free construction adjacent to compounding areas.

Why Modular Walls Are the Only Practical Choice for Healthcare

Plastic sheeting is inexpensive and modular walls cost more per foot. That is the end of the financial argument. In every other dimension that matters in an occupied healthcare setting, the comparison is not close.

Factor Modular Walls (5DCCS) Plastic Sheeting Drywall
ICRA 2.0 Class IV/V Compliant Yes No — ASHE does not recognize plastic sheeting for Class IV or V Yes, when built correctly — but rarely practical in occupied facilities
ASTM E84 Class A Fire Rating Yes — panels are rated No — fails egress path requirements Yes
Negative Air / HEPA Compatible Yes — sealed ports standard Difficult to seal properly; pressure integrity unreliable Yes, when sealed
Installation Speed Same day for most projects Fast Days to weeks — taping, mudding, painting required
Reconfigurable Mid-Project Yes — no rebuild required Limited — requires re-hanging and re-taping No — demolish and rebuild
Demolition Waste at Removal None — panels are reused Disposal required Significant debris — landfill or haul-off required
Professional Appearance Yes — presentable to patients and visitors No — patients and visitors see bare plastic Yes — finishable surface
Suitable for Multi-Phase Projects Yes — reconfigure as phases advance Not practical for complex phasing Each phase requires new construction and demolition

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.

Ready to Protect Your Patients and Your Project?

Most quote requests receive a response within one business day. Tell us your ICRA class, your facility type, and your timeline, and we will put together a containment plan built for your specific renovation.

SDVOSB Certified DVBE Certified SBE Certified DBE Certified

Healthcare 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.

Our systems are specified to meet ICRA 2.0 Class IV and Class V requirements — the two highest-risk classifications in the ASHE framework. These classes apply to construction work in or near high-risk patient areas including oncology, ICU, surgical suites, bone marrow transplant units, and other areas where immunocompromised patients are present. We can provide system specifications to your infection preventionist for documentation and permit purposes.
Yes. Our panel systems include sealed ports for HEPA-filtered negative air machines. Maintaining negative pressure inside the construction zone is required for Class III, IV, and V work under ICRA 2.0 — it prevents contaminated air from migrating into occupied healthcare spaces. We configure port placement during the design phase and can document the negative air setup for your IP team's records.
Yes. Our panels carry an ASTM E84 Class A rating for both flame spread and smoke development. This is the fire standard required for temporary barriers used in occupied healthcare facilities under NFPA 101 and NFPA 241. Plastic sheeting does not meet this standard and is not acceptable in egress paths or occupied construction zones in licensed healthcare facilities.
Yes. Our modular systems are designed specifically for occupied environments. Installation is fast — most standard configurations complete in a single day — and our installation process generates no cutting dust, no debris, and minimal noise. We work around your operational schedule, including off-hours installation when required by facility policy. The barrier is clean and professional-looking on both sides from the moment it goes up.
Multi-phase renovation is one of the primary advantages of modular systems over drywall. When your construction boundary needs to move — because you are completing one section and opening the next — we reconfigure the barrier without demolishing and rebuilding. We design the initial layout with your phasing sequence in mind so the transition between phases is as smooth as possible. This is critical in healthcare where phasing often spans months and involves complex coordination with the IP team.
Yes. We provide system specifications that your infection preventionist can use to complete the technical requirements section of the ICRA 2.0 permit, including barrier type, fire rating, negative air configuration, and inspection access provisions. The documentation requirements on an ICRA permit create a contractual-equivalent accountability record for both the facility and the contractor, so having accurate specifications in hand before work begins matters.
Both options are available. Full-service rentals include delivery, installation, reconfiguration during the project, and removal at closeout. Self-service rental is available for organizations with in-house installation capability. System purchase is worth considering for hospital systems or large GCs with recurring containment needs across multiple projects — the per-project cost becomes significantly lower once you own the inventory. We can walk you through the rent-vs-buy decision based on your projected volume.
Yes. 5DCCS holds SDVOSB (Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business) and DVBE (Disabled Veteran Business Enterprise) certifications, which are required for set-aside work at VA medical centers and many federal construction projects. We are familiar with VHA Directive 7715 and the VA-specific ICRA protocols that govern renovation work in VA healthcare settings. Our owner is a Naval Academy graduate and Surface Warfare Officer veteran.