ODOC Dorm Room 1407 HVAC Repair
Federal opportunity from COM650000 State Fire Marshal COMSFM. Place of performance: OH. Response deadline: Jan 30, 2026.
Market snapshot
Baseline awarded-market signal across all contracting (sample of 400 recent awards; refreshed periodically).
Related hubs & trends
Navigate the lattice: hubs for browsing, trends for pricing signals.
Point of Contact
Agency & Office
Description
The Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of the State Fire Marshal is seeking HVAC repair. SFM has had the fan coil unit that supplies dorm room 1407 fail. The heating valve has started leaking water and I had to shut the hot water valves off to this unit. The dorm room currently has no heat. This will need a purchase request put in to have a contractor come here to SFM and replace the failed hot water actuator valve assembly. This valve is currently soft soldered onto the piping and will need to be cut out and the unit drained of water . Also the piping and the new valve assembly re-soldered. The vendor who gets awarded to do the repair will also need to re-insulate the copper lines with like for like insulation. We cannot have any students or guests stay in this room until this is fixed. Contact Information: RFQ site visits can take place Monday-Friday 8am 4pm. Site contact: Brian Dershaw, (phone) 614-507-6068, Brian.Dershaw@com.ohio.gov All inquiries must be posted in solicitation through Ohio Buys.
Files
Files size/type shown when available.
BidPulsar Analysis
A practical, capture-style breakdown of fit, requirements, risks, and next steps.
FAQ
How do I use the Market Snapshot?
It summarizes awarded-contract behavior for the opportunity’s NAICS and sector, including a recent pricing band (P10–P90), momentum, and composition. Use it as context, not a guarantee.
Is the data live?
The signal updates as new awarded notices enter the system. Always validate the official award and solicitation details on SAM.gov.
What do P10 and P90 mean?
P10 is the 10th percentile award size and P90 is the 90th percentile. Together they describe the typical spread of award values.