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Why Small Businesses in Atlanta Deserve the Same Engineering Rigor as Large Developers

By President  ·  May 9, 2026  ·  3 min read

Walk into a small business in Atlanta — a nail salon in Gwinnett, a barbershop in DeKalb, a carry-out restaurant in Southwest Atlanta — and pay attention to how the space feels. Is it comfortable? Is the temperature consistent? In my experience, the answer in small commercial spaces is usually no. And the reason is almost always the same: the mechanical systems were never designed by a licensed engineer.

What “Designed by a Licensed PE” Actually Means

  • Calculates actual heating and cooling loads for the space — not rule-of-thumb square footage estimates
  • Selects equipment based on calculated loads, preventing oversizing and the short-cycling that follows
  • Designs the duct system to deliver correct airflow to every area, eliminating hot spots and pressure imbalances
  • Verifies the design meets the International Mechanical Code and local amendments
  • Produces sealed drawings that document the design in a way that can be reviewed, inspected, and replicated

The equity issue: Large commercial developers budget engineering services as a standard line item. Small business owners — often minority-owned, often first-generation operators in Atlanta’s community commercial corridors — don’t have the same access. They end up in buildings that are harder and more expensive to operate. Kiddio Engineering was built to change that.

What the Gap Costs

Comfort

Oversized systems short-cycle — equipment reaches set point and shuts off before the space fully conditions. Customers and employees feel it constantly.

Energy costs

An improperly sized or designed system runs inefficiently from day one. Energy bills are higher than they need to be every month, for the life of the equipment.

Equipment lifespan

Equipment that was never correctly sized fails earlier than it should. Replacement costs arrive sooner — and often without warning.

Permit delays

Projects without proper mechanical documentation generate permit comments that delay the opening. Every week a space sits dark while awaiting a permit costs money.

Ready to get started? Kiddio Engineering is taking new clients.

Mechanical and plumbing design, energy code compliance, and permit support for projects across Georgia and the Southeast. Direct PE involvement on every project.

Request a Project Quote → Order COMcheck / REScheck
president@kiddioengineering.com  ·  www.kiddioengineering.com
About the Author
Kimberly Reese, P.E.
Principal Engineer, Kiddio Engineering & Consulting, LLC  ·  PE Firm License No. PEF009040

Licensed Mechanical Engineer practicing in Georgia and the Southeast. Kiddio Engineering provides HVAC and plumbing design, energy code compliance, and technical review for general contractors, mechanical contractors, and owners.

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