Florida fire sprinkler work, posted on state and local portals, is built to NFPA 13, and a fire protection subcontractor that does not read the hazard classification and design criteria is pricing the wrong system.
What Florida sprinkler work sets
Florida sprinkler packages, surfaced on MyFloridaMarketPlace and local portals, reference NFPA 13 and the Florida Building Code to set the hazard classification, the design density, and the testing. The hazard and design criteria decide the system and the cost.
Why sprinkler scope is easy to misprice
The hazard classification, the design density, and the testing sit in the Division 21 specifications and the drawings, not the title. A sub that assumes a light hazard system can miss an ordinary or extra hazard area that changes the cost.
How an AI bid agent reads Florida sprinkler work
An AI bid agent monitors the Florida portals, reads each sprinkler package, and surfaces the NFPA 13 hazard classification, the design criteria, and the deadline. The fire protection sub prices the actual system.
You can see how the agent reads a Florida sprinkler package in our AI bid agent demo for MEP subcontractors. It pulls the NFPA 13 hazard classification and design criteria so the system is priced correctly.