Combined HVAC permit and HERS coordination for contractors who want one simpler compliance path.
Bundling the permit and HERS scope cuts down on handoffs, keeps communication in one lane, and makes scheduling easier from submittal through testing.
Bundled scope
Contractors often lose time when HVAC permit work and HERS testing are handled in separate lanes. This bundled scope keeps the permit and verification process more coordinated from start to finish.
Bundling the permit and HERS scope cuts down on handoffs, keeps communication in one lane, and makes scheduling easier from submittal through testing.
HVAC contractors and project teams that want one contact path for permit coordination and HERS testing support.
These are the core pieces of the scope, written as practical deliverables rather than a general consulting promise.
The outcomes are practical: fewer missed requirements, cleaner handoffs, and less pressure near review or closeout.
The process keeps review, documentation, and field follow-through connected without adding a separate coordination layer.
Plans, property type, timing, and performance goals are reviewed first so the compliance path starts with the right assumptions.
Title 24, CALGreen, and field requirements are translated into a scope the project team can actually carry through design and construction.
Reports, notes, and supporting documents are prepared for city review and for smoother coordination inside the project team.
Testing and inspection are coordinated so the approved path carries through installation, verification, and final closeout.
If this scope is part of a larger compliance need, these services are often reviewed at the same time.
CALGreen documentation prepared for smoother submittals and clearer field coordination.
On-site CALGreen inspection support to verify that documented requirements are being carried through in the field.
HERS testing and verification support that keeps the approved compliance path on track.
Use these resources to move from research to a cleaner submittal, site visit, or closeout conversation.
Short answers for California owners, builders, designers, and contractors planning this scope.
Bundling reduces handoffs between permit paperwork, equipment assumptions, and field verification so contractors have a clearer path from submittal to closeout.
Strata typically needs the project city, equipment information, scope of work, site timing, and any existing permit or Title 24 documentation.
No. It can support replacements, remodels, additions, and other HVAC scopes where permit coordination and HERS verification need to stay connected.
Next step
Include the property type, city, timing, and where the project is in design, permitting, or construction.