Risk Management for Active Plants, Outage-Sensitive Work, and Equipment-Driven Projects
Industrial and manufacturing construction takes place inside operating environments. Projects such as plant expansions, automation upgrades, and equipment installations affect production, labor, and logistics long before a claim is fully measured.
When contractors are working around live utilities, existing employees, material-handling systems, loading activity, temperature-controlled environments, or startup deadlines, the cost of disruption can move far beyond physical damage.
TSIB structures insurance and risk management programs for industrial and manufacturing construction aligned with the operating reality. We coordinate risk transfer, Wrap-Up strategy, administration, surety, claims advocacy, and practical advisory to reflect how projects are sequenced, installed, and brought online.
Where Industrial & Manufacturing Risk Actually Shows Up
Workers’ Compensation for retrofit and installation work
Retrofits, process work, equipment replacement, and trade-intensive installations can create demanding conditions for project labor and increase Workers’ Compensation exposure if not properly managed. Program design should account for contractor oversight, outage coordination, confined work areas, and the practical challenge of working safely while normal operations continue nearby.
Professional, environmental, and technology-linked exposures
Industrial and manufacturing projects often involve engineering coordination, delegated design, controls integration, process-system interfaces, hazardous materials, emissions-related concerns, and connected technology. Depending on the project, Professional Liability, Pollution Liability, Cyber, and other specialty solutions may all play a meaningful role in protecting both the build and the operating business behind it.
Surety and continuity planning
Surety planning matters when contractor prequalification, supplier dependency, financial strength, or schedule sensitivity could affect execution. On projects tied to startup dates, performance milestones, or production commitments, continuity planning is not just a procurement exercise; it is part of overall project success.
Who We Serve
TSIB supports manufacturers, owner-operators, developers, investors, construction managers, general contractors, and design-build teams involved in plant expansions, automation upgrades, distribution and logistics facilities, cold storage environments, fulfillment buildouts, and large-scale modernization programs.

TSIB’s Approach to Industrial & Manufacturing Insurance
Industrial and manufacturing projects do not just have to be built; they have to be installed, coordinated, restarted, and integrated back into operations. TSIB aligns insurance strategy with construction-focused brokerage, Wrap-Ups and administration, surety, claims advocacy, compliance support, and practical risk advisory services in one coordinated approach built for projects where uptime, turnover timing, and operating continuity all matter.