High-Rise Installations
Signage at elevation requires a different level of planning, engineering, and execution.
High-Rise Installations with Safety First
Installing signage on a high-rise building is a fundamentally different undertaking from standard installation. The access methods, the equipment, the safety planning, and the structural considerations all change when the work happens at elevation. Rope access, scaffolding, and crane-assisted installation each require a crew that knows what they're doing before they leave the ground. United Signs handles high-rise installations from architectural accents on mid-rise buildings to signage positioned at the top of towers. Every elevated project is planned with the same rigor. Access method, structural attachment, safety protocols, and equipment selection are all determined before the crew steps onto the site.
Why Choose United Signs for High-Rise Installations
Expert Safety Protocols
Every elevated installation has a safety plan in place before the crew leaves the ground. No improvisation at height.
Professional Equipment
Rope access, scaffolding, and crane-assisted methods are selected based on what the building and the installation actually require.
Minimal Disruption
High-rise installations in occupied buildings are planned to keep disruption to tenants and operations as low as possible.
How We Work
Consultation & Survey
We review your site, define your sign program, and map every location, size, and mounting spec before design begins.
Design & Permitting
Certified shop drawings are produced and submitted for permit approval u2014 signed off by your team before production starts.
In-House Fabrication
Every sign is built in our own facility with in-house QC. No outsourcing means tighter quality and reliable lead times.
Installation & Sign-Off
Certified crews install every sign. We conduct a full walkthrough and provide documentation before handover.
Related Capabilities
Industries We Serve
Frequently Asked Questions
Rope access, scaffolding, crane-assisted lifts, and mobile elevated work platforms are the primary methods. The right approach depends on the building structure, the size of the sign, and what the site conditions allow.
Safety planning happens before the crew arrives on site. That includes a site assessment, access method selection, rigging planning, and briefings for everyone working on the job. Elevated work doesn't leave room for decisions made on the fly.
The access method, the equipment, the structural engineering, and the safety requirements are all significantly more involved. A sign going up ten or more floors requires planning that a ground-level installation simply doesn't demand.
As early as possible. The access method, structural attachment points, and permit requirements all need to be resolved well before installation day. The more complex the building, the more lead time the planning requires.
