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Fire Alarm and Suppression System Repair for 144th Fighter Wing

Department of Defense (DoD) > U.S. Army
FFP
est. $5.0M – $45M

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Quick Brief

The Department of Defense is procuring repair services for fire alarm and suppression systems at the Fresno Air National Guard Base. The repairs are necessary to restore fire systems in multiple buildings to fully operational status, addressing critical deficiencies identified during recent inspections. HCI Systems, Inc. is the sole-source contractor due to their unique knowledge and previous inspections of the systems, which are essential for timely and effective repairs.

Generated 30d ago

Scope & Requirements

The work involves repairing fire alarm and suppression systems across multiple buildings at the Fresno Air National Guard Base, addressing deficiencies identified in recent inspections.

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Contract Details

Contract Typei
FFP
Estimated Value
est. $5.0M – $45M
Similar contracts award $13K$136K (median $40K, 9,578 awards)Above typical range
Incumbent Contractor
HCI Systems, Inc.
Expected Awards
1
NAICS Codes
Place of Performance
Fresno, CA, USA

Qualifications & Eligibility

Set-Aside Category
Sole Source

Agency & Contact

Contracting Organization

Agency
DEPT OF DEFENSE
Sub-Agency
Department of the Army National Guard Bureau

Point of Contact

John A. Smith
Contracting Officer
(202) 555-0100

Key Dates

Published3mo ago
Mar 17, 2026
Last Updated3mo ago
Mar 17, 2026
Response Date3mo ago
Mar 20, 202616:00
PDT
Response Due2mo ago
Mar 31, 2026

Description

The 144th Fighter Wing (144 FW), intends to issue a sole-source award for repair services to fire alarm and suppression systems. These repairs are required to restore fire systems in multiple buildings throughout the installation back to fully operational. The 144 FW intends to issue a sole-source award to HCI Systems, Inc. HCI recently completed the required NFPA 72, NFPA 25, and UFC 3‑600‑01 inspections of the fire alarm, fire pump, and fire sprinkler systems across Fresno Air National Guard Base. The inspections identified multiple critical deficiencies requiring immediate corrective action, including maintenance of three electric fire pumps, replacement of twenty‑six outdated sprinkler gauges, installation of missing escutcheons, calc plates, PIV locks, FDC caps, and new fire alarm batteries across numerous buildings. Additional deficiencies include Monaco fire alarm programming corrections, device label updates, and extensive troubleshooting for non‑reporting and non‑functional alarm circuits in more than a dozen facilities. Because HCI performed the inspections, they possess the only complete and accurate diagnostic baseline for these issues, including system‑specific knowledge of risers, pump isolation points, and proprietary Monaco Enterprises device configurations. Under NFPA 72 and NFPA 25, as well as standard fire‑protection contractor liability and insurance

requirements, any contractor performing repairs must independently verify system conditions prior to accepting responsibility. A new vendor cannot legally or ethically rely on the findings of another contractor, and would therefore be required to re‑inspect, re‑test, and re‑diagnose all affected systems including the dormant fire pumps, sprinkler components, and Monaco Enterprises fire alarm network before any repair work could begin. This mandatory re‑verification would duplicate work already completed by HCI, delay necessary NFPA‑driven corrections, extend system impairments, and increase risk to mission‑critical facilities. Several required corrective actions, particularly those involving Monaco Enterprises programming and troubleshooting, also require proprietary system access and specialized training not commonly held by alternate vendors. HCI already maintains this capability, along with full system familiarity, ensuring the repairs can be completed safely, efficiently, and within required regulatory timelines. For these reasons, HCI is the only responsible source capable of performing the needed repairs, and a sole source award is fully justified to protect life‑safety systems, mission readiness, and government resources. This notice of intent is not a request for quote/proposal. Any interested party that believes it is capable of meeting the requirement described herein may identify themselves and must provide evidence of their capability to fulfill the requirement being requested by the closing date and time provided in this notice. Responses must be submitted in writing to the 144th Contracting [email protected]; [email protected]. Telephone responses and requests will not be acknowledged. Any determination by the Government to not compete this requirement based on responses to this notice is solely within the discretion of the Government. Information received will be considered solely for the purpose of determining whether to conduct a competitive requirement. Jarrod Sanchez to this opportunity.

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