Why Zion
You don't actually want a contractor. You want the paperwork done, the AHJ off your back, and a building where the systems work when they're needed. Here's how we do that.
1. One company. One report. One bill.
Most building owners run their fire-protection program through four or five separate contractors โ alarm, sprinkler, extinguishers, kitchen hood, ERCES. Five accounts. Five inspection schedules. Five different reports in five different formats. We replaced that. Every fire-protection system in your building under one Zion account, one technician team, one monthly bill, and one AHJ-ready report after every visit.
2. The person who walks your building has the credentials
Our senior staff hold NICET Level III & II certifications across multiple fire-protection disciplines. Every plan we submit, every AHJ call we make, and every deficiency report we sign is reviewed by a senior credentialed contractor. When your AHJ asks a code question, the answer is in the room.
3. We trained the technician who showed up
Zion Fire Academy is the in-house apprenticeship program that staffs every Zion job site. Documented NICET progression. Named mentorship. Paid classroom time. The person at your panel knows what they're doing because we taught them โ not because we borrowed them from a sub for the week.
4. The paperwork lands the same day
We built AI into our back office. Deficiency reports drafted in minutes. AHJ certificates delivered same-day. Inspection summaries in your inbox before the truck leaves your parking lot. You stop chasing reports from the contractor you hired.
5. Code-first, by default
Every system we design references NFPA, IFC, IBC, and Texas Administrative Code Title 28 โ with the section number. If we can't show you the code reference, we don't recommend the work. That's the discipline that wins AHJ arguments without a fight.
6. Owner-operated, in Texas
Decisions happen in McKinney, not at a regional office in another state. Escalation goes through info@zion.us. If you need to escalate, the path is one step long.