Point-of-Use Systems
Under-sink and counter-mounted units at the tap.
- Classroom and break-room drinking stations
- Cafeteria food-prep sinks
- Medical exam and lab sinks
- Tenant kitchens in commercial & residential buildings
Solutions
We help you fix your current water contamination issues, prevent future contamination events, and build communication programs that earn back community trust.
Our four pillars
Filtration alone doesn't solve a contamination problem. We pair certified systems with the education, consulting, and strategy your community needs to fix today's issues, prevent the next event, and rebuild trust.
Workshops, briefings, and plain-English materials for staff, parents, tenants, and elected officials.
Assessments, lab-grade testing, and expert guidance scoped to your facility and contaminants of concern.
Remediation roadmaps, prevention plans, and communication programs that earn back community trust.
Independently certified systems — NSF/ANSI 42, 53, 58, 401, and P473 — matched to your facility.
Certifications we specify against
Certification means a third party verified that the system actually reduces what the label claims. We work exclusively with systems that hold the certifications relevant to your contaminants of concern.
NSF/ANSI 42
Aesthetic effects
Chlorine, taste, and odor reduction.
NSF/ANSI 53
Health effects
Lead, VOCs, cysts, and selected heavy metals.
NSF/ANSI 58
Reverse osmosis
Broad-spectrum reduction including arsenic and nitrates.
NSF/ANSI 401
Emerging contaminants
Pharmaceuticals and certain industrial chemicals.
NSF P248
Military microbiological water purifiers
Emergency-grade reduction of bacteria, viruses, and protozoan cysts.
NSF P231
Microbiological purifiers
Reduction of bacteria, viruses, and cysts from drinking water.
System types
Under-sink and counter-mounted units at the tap.
Treatment where water enters the building or wing.
Public hydration that holds up to scrutiny.
That's exactly what the consultation is for. Heather will review your situation and tell you what's appropriate — and what isn't.