Hong Kong public housing inspection background
Members of our team have worked on Hong Kong government-funded public estate projects,
inspecting builder workmanship against the Hong Kong government's official acceptance
standards. That includes structural readiness, finishing tolerances, waterproofing,
plumbing, electrical first and second fix, and final handover criteria — applied across
multiple estates over multiple years. The discipline that comes from public-sector
inspection — clear pass/fail criteria, traceable defect records, no shortcuts — is the
discipline we bake into every RenovaGuard checklist.
Broad Building Services expertise — local and overseas
On the engineering side, our team has worked across Building Services (mechanical, electrical and
plumbing) systems in Hong Kong's residential, commercial and infrastructure sectors,
and on overseas projects with global power utility companies. We've sized cables,
designed risers, commissioned lifts, tested fire systems, and signed off
gas installations — the kind of work that gives you a feel for what good looks like
and what to watch out for. That experience shapes RenovaGuard's electrical, plumbing
and gas inspection checklists, and informs the trade overlays on every floor plan.
Why we built it this way
The same problem shows up in every renovation, regardless of size or budget: the
standard isn't standardised. Each builder, each inspector, each homeowner ends up
working from a different mental model, and the gaps between them are where mistakes
live. RenovaGuard exists to close those gaps — pulling public-sector rigour, Building Services
engineering judgement, and modern AI tooling into a single workspace that's usable
by everyone on the project. We're not building software for software's sake. We're
building the platform we wish we'd had on every site we've ever stood on.