
When the right disciplines come together with disciplined planning and tight execution, even the most demanding outage scopes can be delivered with certainty. This recent project is a strong example of what’s possible when coordination, experience, and accountability lead the way.
Project Overview
This scope involved a full gas turbine exhaust replacement, delivered as an integrated, multi-discipline project encompassing civil, structural, electrical, and mechanical work. From heavy lifts and structural modifications to electrical tie-ins and final mechanical installation, success depended on precise sequencing and constant coordination across trades.

One Team. One Point of Accountability
THM managed all subcontractors and vendors under one roof, serving as the single point of accountability for safety, schedule, quality, and cost. This integrated delivery model kept every discipline aligned and allowed the team to respond quickly as site conditions evolved.
Executing Under Pressure
The work was completed during a compressed outage window, with multiple unforeseen weather delays and several mid-stream scope changes. Despite these challenges, the team adapted in real time, maintained momentum, and delivered the project on schedule with minimal cost impact to the client.
Why Integration Matters for Sustaining Capital Work
Outage-driven sustaining capital projects leave zero room for error. This is where disciplined planning, experienced field leadership, and true cross-trade collaboration make the difference. When civil, structural, electrical, and mechanical scopes move in lockstep, risk is reduced and certainty increases.
Looking Ahead to 2026
If you’re building out your 2026 sustaining capital project portfolio and need a partner who can execute complex scopes with confidence, let’s grab a coffee and have a conversation.






