ACG installs glazing for continuing care retirement communities, assisted living facilities, and independent living campuses across Florida. Interior door and glass packages at scale, multi-building phased delivery, and the scheduling discipline that large senior living campuses demand.
A senior living campus is not a single building — it's a collection of residential buildings, common area facilities, dining rooms, health and wellness centers, and memory care units, often built in phases over multiple years. The glazing scope on a project like this is primarily an interior door and glass package — hundreds of unit entry doors, bathroom windows, corridor glass, and common area storefront — multiplied across every building on the campus.
The challenge is not the complexity of any single unit — it's the volume and the sequencing. A 300-unit CCRC has 300 interior door and glass packages plus corridor glazing across multiple buildings. The GC needs a glazing sub who can order material in phased batches, deliver units as buildings are ready, install without creating bottlenecks, and close punch lists fast. That's what ACG does.
Florida's senior living construction market is one of the most sustained in the country. The state's demographics — the largest 65+ population of any state in the country — drive continuous demand for new CCRC campuses, ALF expansion, and independent living community development. ACG's three offices and statewide capacity position us to handle major senior living scopes wherever they're being built in Florida.
Siena Lakes Naples is an Erickson Senior Living community — one of the country's leading senior living operators, known for large-scale, highly amenitized CCRC campuses. This is not a small assisted living facility — it's a multi-building campus development with high expectations for quality, schedule compliance, and closeout documentation.
ACG delivered the glazing scope at Siena Lakes Naples, providing interior door and glass packages across multiple buildings and phases. The scope required phased material procurement aligned to each building's construction sequence, precise installation scheduling to avoid holding up the interior finish trades, and a complete closeout package meeting Erickson's project documentation standards.
Delivering at a project of this profile — for an operator who builds to a national standard and manages projects with this level of scrutiny — is one of the strongest references ACG can offer to any GC working in the senior living space.
A 300-unit campus with 300+ interior packages is not three projects — it's one scope with a high-volume delivery requirement. The glazing sub must have the procurement, logistics, and workforce capacity to maintain consistent installation quality from the first unit to the last. ACG maintains that standard through AI-managed tracking, not by hoping the crew stays focused.
Senior living campuses build in phases — sometimes over two or three years. The glazing scope needs to be sequenced and procured in batches that match the construction sequence, not ordered all at once and left sitting on site. ACG phases procurement to match the GC's building schedule, reducing site storage requirements and the risk of material damage before installation.
Senior living facilities licensed by Florida AHCA have specific finish and hardware requirements for door and glass packages — ADA-compliant hardware, vision panels at specific locations, rated assemblies at exit corridors. ACG specifies code-correct products from the start so the inspection record is clean and the closeout documentation satisfies the licensing authority.
On a 300-unit campus, even a 5% punch list rate means 15 units with open items at closeout. ACG's installation standard targets zero punch list on first walkthrough — not as an aspiration, but as an operational result. When there is a punch list item, ACG closes it in the same visit, not on a return trip weeks later.
Florida senior living facilities must comply with the Florida Building Code, NFPA 101 life safety requirements, and AHCA licensing standards for licensed care facilities. Requirements include fire-rated assemblies at corridors and exit pathways, safety glazing at hazardous locations, impact-rated exterior systems at coastal locations, and ADA-compliant door and hardware configurations. ACG specifies code-correct products for every location from the submittal phase.
ACG uses AI-tracked procurement and installation scheduling to manage high-volume repetitive scopes. Material is ordered in phased batches aligned to each building's construction sequence. Installation is tracked unit by unit against rough-opening readiness. The result is a glazing sub who never holds up the GC's interior finish schedule — which on a senior living campus is the difference between on-time occupancy and delayed revenue.
Yes. ACG delivered the glazing scope at Siena Lakes Naples, an Erickson Senior Living community. The scope involved interior door and glass packages across multiple buildings and phases, coordinated with the GC's construction sequence for a large-scale campus development. Erickson's documentation and quality standards are among the most rigorous in the senior living industry — ACG met them.
Erickson Senior Living CCRC — interior door and glass packages across a multi-building campus in Naples, FL.
ACG's healthcare glazing expertise — hospitals, emergency departments, and medical facilities across Florida.
What GCs need from a glazing subcontractor — why ACG is the resource senior living GCs rely on for volume and schedule compliance.
Send your drawings. We return a complete scope — interior package pricing, phased delivery plan, code compliance path, and per-unit cost breakdown — within 48 hours.
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