Users’ safety and eco positivity go hand in hand with the chemical choices at EA. Diversey range of chemicals are used at the mall. A good sewage treatment is in place. Water is procured both through the underground and outside source and an RO plant takes care of the purification. The pollution control is regulated through the STP plant. The sewage is partly composted and the rest is evacuated and disposed off responsibly. One third of the mall’s energy consumption is met through renewable energy sources.
Officially, though EA’s operation is certified by the pollution control board, the day-to-day operations are well above the mark set by the certification bodies norms. Thanks to the implementation and regulation of the certifications for worthy practices, as the mall has encountered no accidents. “Though we are out of the bandwidth of certifications, our quality is close to ISO standards,” Aroon cites the background for EA’s perfect approach.
The disaster and calamity management in the mall is also well drawn out. During the floods few months back, the mall was working throughout. There was water inundation, barricades were installed and the inflow was pumped out. Being in the center of the city adds a lot of pressure in terms of security too.
Being a service industry, Express Avenue mall’s growth is directly related to its deliverables. EA joins the limited league in this sector that has grown phenomenally in the recent years. “Our USP is in our outlook. Our cleaning and maintenance attributes are very clear and these include the unspoken parameters too. That is exactly the reason for EA’s popularity.”
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Dear Mall Management ,
went through with article and some excerpts by Aroon . I was intrigued by your comment on the CAMAC expenditure , as this is recoverable from the tenants through signing of the leases.
please look on your HK l FM l Security contracts on the deployment , probably , you might be spending heavily on them .