Fire Watch Guard Services in Pueblo, CO
The Fast Fire Watch Company is a firefighter-run fire watch company protecting Pueblo with NFPA- and OSHA-compliant guards. When your sprinklers or fire alarm go offline, or hot work puts your site at risk, we get a licensed Pueblo fire watch guard on site in under three hours, every time.
You get the best rates and the best customer service in Pueblo fire watch: no long-term contract, GPS-tracked patrol logs your fire marshal will accept, and a real person on the phone any hour of any day. Call and we will confirm your guard and a start time on the spot.
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A Complete Definition
What Is Fire Watch in Pueblo, CO?
A fire watch in Pueblo is a trained guard who patrols your property on a set route while fire protection is down or hot work is underway, watching for fire and calling 911 the moment it starts. We provide that guard ourselves, drawn from teams working across the Pueblo area, so when an alarm panel faults in a downtown masonry building or a sprinkler riser drops offline at a manufacturing plant, someone trained is walking your building, usually on site in under three hours.
Colorado requires this coverage any time a building’s built-in protection is impaired, or while welding and other hot work send sparks near anything that burns. The International Fire Code (IFC) as adopted by the City of Pueblo, enforced by the Pueblo Fire Department and backed by the Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control, sets the rule. A guard holds the line and keeps your permit valid until repairs are done.
Not all Fire Watch Companies in Pueblo staff to that standard. We run continuous coverage with no gap between shifts and a documented log built for the inspector, across the downtown core, the Historic Arkansas Riverwalk district, the steel and manufacturing plants, and the rail corridor along the river. Tell us the address and what needs watching, and a guard is on the way.
When Fire Watch Is Required in Pueblo
A Pueblo fire watch is typically triggered by one of six conditions:
- A fire alarm system is out of service for more than four hours within any 24-hour period (NFPA 72).
- A sprinkler system is impaired for more than ten hours within any 24-hour period (NFPA 25).
- Hot work (welding, cutting, brazing, grinding, torch-down roofing) is performed in or near combustible materials (NFPA 51B and OSHA 1910.252).
- Active construction is underway and permanent fire protection isn't yet operational (NFPA 241).
- A special event introduces temporary structures, increased occupancy, or pyrotechnics.
- A fire marshal has issued a violation that requires interim watch coverage until repairs are complete.
No two of these triggers run on the same clock. A hot work watch runs a different hold than an impaired alarm, a construction watch logs to a different program than a sprinkler shutdown, and the Pueblo Fire Department expects the right paperwork for whichever one applies. We staff guards who have stood every one of these watches across Pueblo County, which is how correction notices stay off your record and how sign-off comes faster.
Who in Pueblo Needs Fire Watch Services?
Building owners and managers call for a fire watch when the structure can no longer protect itself: office buildings, retail centers, hotels, apartments, hospitals, warehouses, and active job sites all qualify. A shut-down sprinkler riser, a faulted alarm panel, or an out-of-service standpipe leaves a building that cannot detect or suppress fire, and a guard walking a fixed route fills that gap until the system is back.
Around Pueblo, the calls come from welding and grinding crews at the steel mill and the rail-car and wind-tower shops, from contractors mid-repair on alarm and sprinkler systems in older downtown buildings, from construction teams on tenant build-outs and plant expansions, and from venue operators running crowds along the Riverwalk and at the convention center. Each round gets logged with a time stamp and the guard’s name, so what you hand the Pueblo Fire Department on inspection is a clean, unbroken record.
The Cost of Skipping a Fire Watch in Pueblo
A red tag from the Pueblo Fire Department is what skipping a fire watch usually buys you, and it is the cheap part of the bill. Inspectors who find an impaired sprinkler or a dead alarm with nobody standing watch can write a violation, pull your certificate of occupancy, or freeze the job until a trained guard is on the property, and the re-inspection puts you at the back of the line. Tenants get displaced, schedules slip, and the daily fines accrue while you scramble to staff the coverage you should have had from the start.
Then there is the fire you never see coming. Sparks from cutting work can sit in a wall cavity and smolder for twenty or thirty minutes after the crew clocks out, and a building with its suppression offline has no second chance once that ember catches. Insurers know the pattern cold. File a claim that traces back to a coverage gap the code required you to fill, and the carrier has its grounds to deny, leaving the owner to eat the structure loss, the business interruption, and the liability. One guard on a documented route costs a rounding error against any of that.
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What's Included with Every Fire Watch Patrol
Everyone asks about pricing and response time, and those matter. But the real product we deliver is documentation. Here’s what comes standard with every deployment.
GPS-tracked patrol log
Photo documentation
AHJ-compliant reporting
Certified and insured guards
Fire extinguisher on hand
Direct account manager
End-of-engagement compliance packet
How Much Does Fire Watch Cost in Pueblo, CO?
What you pay for a fire watch in Pueblo tracks the job in front of the guard, not a flat sticker price. A single overnight hot work hold at a Riverwalk restaurant build-out is a different assignment from a multi-guard rotation covering a steel-plant building with its riser drained, or weeks of NFPA 241 coverage on a plant expansion along the rail corridor. A handful of factors move the rate, and here is what they are.
What Drives Fire Watch Staff Pricing
- Type of watch: a routine alarm-impairment patrol prices differently than steel-mill hot work or assembly-occupancy coverage at the convention center, which carry more risk and more documentation.
- Hour of the day: overnight, weekend, and holiday shifts run higher than a standard weekday window, since that is when much of the plant and rail work happens.
- Emergency versus booked ahead: a same-day call after an alarm panel fails costs more than coverage you schedule in advance around a planned sprinkler shutdown.
- Length of the engagement: a one-night watch sits at the top of the range, while a multi-week construction or plant-expansion job earns a lower sustained rate.
- Guard count: a small office may need one patrol officer, while a hospital wing or a mill building can require several guards on rotation to hold every floor and work area.
Typical Fire Watch Guard Cost Range
Most scheduled Pueblo watches fall inside the standard hourly band quoted above, per guard, covering the bulk of impairment patrols, hot work holds, and construction coverage across the city. Same-day emergency dispatch after a system failure sits above that range because we are mobilizing a trained guard to your downtown or industrial address on no notice. Long-running assignments pull the other way: a multi-week plant expansion or a mill-building project lands at a lower sustained rate than a single overnight shift. Call and we will price your specific watch before any guard rolls.
Get a Specific Quote
Call 1-800-899-7524 for a same-day quote, or use our online quote form. Our staffing team will confirm the impairment type, the AHJ, the deployment timeline, and the number of personnel required, then send a written quote with the exact fire watch hourly rate and the projected total for your engagement.
What Pueblo Fire Department Fire Prevention Bureau Requires
The International Fire Code as adopted by the City of Pueblo sets the baseline. The code that governs your watch is the IFC adopted locally, and the Pueblo Fire Department enforces it alongside the Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control, building by building. Our guards patrol and document to that standard on every shift, not a generic one.
Hot work demands a watch under IFC Chapter 35 and NFPA 51B. Cutting, welding, and grinding require a dedicated guard for the duration of the job and for no less than 30 minutes after the last spark, per IFC 3504.2.1 through 3504.2.6. The guard holds a charged extinguisher and watches for the slow burn a crew breaking down its gear will miss.
Impaired suppression and detection fall under NFPA 25 and NFPA 72. Take a water-based system out for service under NFPA 25, or drop a fire alarm under NFPA 72, and a guard stands the watch until that system is tested, verified, and back in service.
The Pueblo AHJ sets your specific conditions. Patrol interval, log format, and watch duration come from the Pueblo Fire Department and the local fire marshal, and we work to their call so coverage holds up when the inspector arrives.
Closeout is signed and time-stamped. When the watch ends, you get a complete patrol log, signed and dated, that stands as proof the coverage ran unbroken from the first round to the last.
- Fire alarm system out of service longer than 4 hours in a 24-hour period (NFPA 72)
- Sprinkler system impairment longer than 10 hours in a 24-hour period (NFPA 25)
- Hot work in any occupied structure (NFPA 51B)
- Active construction sites without complete fire protection (NFPA 241)
- Special events with temporary structures or occupancy increases
- Fire marshal-issued violation requiring interim watch
How Fast Can You Be On-Site in Pueblo?
- Downtown Pueblo & the Riverwalk core – under 60 minutes
- Greater Pueblo County metro area – under 90 minutes
- Pueblo West, Blende, and Salt Creek – under 2 hours
- Extended southern Colorado coverage area – under 3 hours
Services We Provide in Pueblo
- Steel & Heavy Industrial Fire Watch – Patrol and monitoring for EVRAZ Rocky Mountain Steel and Pueblo manufacturing plants during hot work or impaired suppression systems
- Corporate & Office Fire Watch – Discreet uniformed guards for Pueblo County commercial buildings during alarm panel or suppression outages
- Construction Site Fire Watch – Code-required coverage for active Pueblo job sites performing hot work or lacking completed suppression systems
- Hot Work Fire Watch – Continuous monitoring during and 30 min after welding, cutting, or grinding operations per IFC Chapter 35 and NFPA 51B
- Warehouse & Distribution Fire Watch – Patrol and monitoring for Pueblo storage facilities and rail-corridor logistics sites during system impairments
- Event & Venue Fire Watch – Trained guards for concerts, conventions, and gatherings at venues along the Historic Arkansas Riverwalk and the Pueblo Convention Center
- Hospitality Fire Watch – Guest-facing patrols for Pueblo hotels and lodging during system impairments, keeping evacuations orderly
- Healthcare & Hospital Fire Watch – ILSM-compliant coverage for facilities like Parkview Medical Center and CommonSpirit St. Mary-Corwin
Pour a foundation downtown or expand a plant out along the rail corridor and the fire hazard arrives long before the building’s own protection does. That early window is where our Pueblo Fire Watch Services plug in on a job site. IFC Chapter 33 and NFPA 241 put a watch in play once temporary heat is running, hot work is active, combustibles are stacking up, or the standpipes and alarms are not yet energized, the exact conditions on every manufacturing expansion, every Riverwalk-area redevelopment, and every rehab of an older masonry structure in the city.
We run the building the way the trades do, floor by floor, sweeping for ignition sources left behind at shift change and logging each pass for the general contractor and the Pueblo Fire Department. Overnight, weekends, the dead hours after the last crew rolls out but the hazard stays put, that is when our guards are walking. Send us your construction schedule and your permit conditions and we will build the coverage to fit them.
Why Pueblo Fire Watch Demand Stays High
EVRAZ Rocky Mountain Steel and heavy manufacturing. The mill’s furnaces, rolling lines, and rail and pipe operations run constant hot work and material handling, where a single sprinkler shutdown or a welding job on the plant floor puts a required watch in play, often with an impaired system somewhere in a building that size.
Rail and the rail-car and wind-tower corridor. The rail yards and the heavy-fabrication shops that build rail cars and wind-tower sections keep cutting, welding, and grinding going all day, all of it falling under IFC Chapter 35 and NFPA 51B with extinguishing equipment staged at every station.
Historic Arkansas Riverwalk and older downtown masonry. The restaurants, event spaces, and aging brick buildings along the Riverwalk and through the downtown core pack dense occupancy into structures where one alarm fault or a planned sprinkler shutdown can put several tenants under a required watch at once.
The Pueblo Chemical Depot legacy and area industry. The depot site and the industrial properties around it carry hazardous-material and demolition work where impaired-system and hot work conditions trigger documented watch coverage under the local code.
Hospitals and high-plains winters. Campuses like Parkview Medical Center and CommonSpirit St. Mary-Corwin pull alarms and sprinklers offline for upgrades and tenant work, and the high-plains cold freezes and cracks sprinkler lines, leaving buildings exposed until crews restore them.
Pueblo Areas We Cover
- Downtown Pueblo: older masonry office and retail
- Historic Arkansas Riverwalk: dining, event, and assembly venues
- Pueblo Convention Center district: assembly and event space
- EVRAZ Rocky Mountain Steel: mill operations and heavy industrial
- Rail corridor and fabrication: rail-car and wind-tower shops
- Pueblo Chemical Depot area: industrial and hazardous-material sites
- Bessemer and Mesa Junction: commercial and mixed-use
- Parkview and St. Mary-Corwin areas: hospital campuses
- Pueblo Memorial Airport area: hangars and light industrial
- Pueblo West: warehouse and distribution
- St. Charles Mesa and Blende: light industrial and agriculture
NFPA & OSHA Compliance
The Standards Behind Every Pueblo Fire Watch
A hospital wing, a steel-mill cutting station, a Riverwalk event hall, the coverage answers to one standard regardless of the address: a trained guard, a fixed interval, a time-stamped log, and shifts that hand off with no gap until your systems are restored and the Pueblo Fire Department signs off. Give us the property and what needs watching, and a guard with a log is rolling.
The International Fire Code (IFC) as adopted by the City of Pueblo
Colorado is a home-rule state with no statewide fire code, so each jurisdiction adopts the International Fire Code locally. The City of Pueblo adopts the IFC, which establishes the authority of the Pueblo Fire Department to require fire watch and references the more specific operational standards below.
NFPA 25, Standard for the Inspection, Testing, and Maintenance of Water-Based Fire Protection Systems
NFPA 25 defines a sprinkler ‘impairment.’ Once a sprinkler system is out of service for more than ten hours within any 24-hour period, the impairment coordinator must notify the Pueblo Fire Department and either restore the system or implement a fire watch. Our sprinkler-impairment Fire Watch Services in Pueblo document directly against the NFPA 25 impairment program requirements.
NFPA 72, National Fire Alarm and Signaling Code
NFPA 72 is the equivalent standard for fire alarm and detection systems. A fire alarm system out of service for more than four hours within any 24-hour period requires either restoration or a documented fire watch. Our alarm-impairment guards in Pueblo focus on occupant notification readiness and continuous building patrols at the interval the Pueblo Fire Department requires.
NFPA 51B and IFC Chapter 35, Hot Work Safety
IFC Chapter 35 and NFPA 51B mandate a fire watch during hot work in any area with combustible materials within 35 feet of the work, combustible floors or walls, or openings that could allow sparks to travel. Under IFC sections 3504.2.1 through 3504.2.6, the watch must remain in place for at least 30 minutes after the hot work ends, with extinguishing equipment immediately available.
NFPA 241 and IFC Chapter 33, Construction Fire Safety
NFPA 241 and IFC Chapter 33 govern fire prevention on active construction, alteration, and demolition sites across Pueblo. They require a designated fire prevention program manager, a written site fire prevention plan, and fire watch coverage whenever hot work is performed or fire protection systems are not fully operational.
OSHA 29 CFR 1910.252 and 29 CFR 1926.352
OSHA’s general industry and construction hot work standards parallel NFPA 51B and apply federally regardless of state code adoption. Failure to provide a designated fire watch during hot work is one of the most cited fire-related OSHA violations every year, and it shows up routinely in industrial citations around Pueblo County.
Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control overlay
The Pueblo Fire Department and the Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control enforce these standards under the International Fire Code as adopted by the City of Pueblo. Local amendments add documentation expectations our Fire Watch Company in Pueblo builds around as part of every engagement.
Comprehensive Fire Watch Services in Pueblo, CO
Pueblo properties get documented fire watch coverage from crews already working the steel plants, the downtown core, and the surrounding area, billed at $30 to $50 per hour with no contract to sign. A trained guard reaches most addresses well inside the day, around the clock, every day of the year. One call confirms your guard, your start time, and a patrol log the inspector will accept.
Commercial Fire Watch in Pueblo
Office buildings, retail centers, hotels, apartments, and HOA-managed properties make up a large share of our Pueblo deployments. Our Commercial Fire Watch Guards in Pueblo are trained on stairwell and floor patrols, occupancy management during alarm impairments, and Pueblo Fire Department-compliant log documentation that property managers can hand directly to inspectors.
Construction Site Fire Watch (NFPA 241) in Pueblo
Active construction sites in the area face elevated fire risk from temporary heat sources, combustible debris, and incomplete fire protection systems. Our NFPA 241-trained guards rotate through hot work areas, monitor temporary heating equipment, perform end-of-shift cleanup verification, and stand by for overnight coverage when site fire systems are off.
Hot Work Fire Watch in Pueblo
Welding, cutting, brazing, grinding, and torch-down roofing all require dedicated fire watch personnel under IFC Chapter 35, NFPA 51B, and OSHA 1910.252. Our Pueblo hot work guards stay on-site during the operation and for the full 30-minute (often 60-minute) cooldown period the standard requires, with a charged extinguisher in hand and a documented log of every spark observation.
Special Events & Assembly Occupancy Fire Watch in Pueblo
Concerts, festivals, conventions, and gatherings at venues along the Historic Arkansas Riverwalk and at the Pueblo Convention Center can require fire watch under the International Fire Code assembly occupancy provisions as adopted by the City of Pueblo. Our event Fire Watch Guards in Pueblo coordinate with venue operations, fire department staging, and crowd management to maintain compliance throughout the event.
Healthcare and Industrial Fire Watch in Pueblo
Hospital campuses such as Parkview Medical Center and CommonSpirit St. Mary-Corwin need healthcare-trained personnel familiar with clinical protocols. Steel, manufacturing, and rail-corridor properties need guards comfortable with the heat, electrical, and material-handling realities of those sites. We staff both with the right credentials.
Pueblo Fire Watch FAQs
Yes. Colorado has no statewide unarmed security-guard license, so the baseline is different here: every Pueblo guard is trained, background-checked, insured, and fire-watch certified, and we hold any local license the City of Pueblo requires. Assignments that call for an armed officer are filled by personnel holding the local permit that work requires.
Most central Pueblo addresses see a guard in 60 to 120 minutes. Properties out in the wider Pueblo County area typically run 2 to 3 hours, and the farthest outlying sites can reach 4. Our dispatch line runs 24 hours a day.
They will, because our logs are built to the documentation the Pueblo Fire Department and the Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control look for: GPS time stamps, photos, and guard signatures on every round, handed over as a clean record.
We do, with standing fire watch coverage at hotels, warehouses, plants, and corporate sites across downtown Pueblo and out through the surrounding business districts and Pueblo County.
Construction is one of our heaviest categories, especially NFPA 241 coverage on plant expansions along the rail corridor and downtown rehabilitation projects. We put multi-guard rotations on extended builds and hold the coverage for as long as the job runs.
Rates move with the watch duration, the time of day, and how many guards the job needs. Call 1-800-899-7524 and we will turn a specific quote around for you, usually inside 15 minutes.
The Pueblo Fire Department enforces the International Fire Code as adopted by the City of Pueblo, and it spells out when a watch is mandatory: a fire alarm down more than 4 hours in any 24, a sprinkler impaired past 10 hours, hot work in occupied space under IFC Chapter 35 and NFPA 51B, construction sites without finished fire protection under IFC Chapter 33 and NFPA 241, special events using temporary structures, and any interim watch a fire marshal orders after a violation.
It is an unbroken, documented patrol run by a trained, certified guard on a fixed schedule, usually every 15 to 30 minutes depending on the property. Hospitals and big construction jobs get multi-guard rotations. Each pass records a time stamp, GPS, what the guard observed, photos, and a signature, and the coverage holds 24/7 with logged shift handoffs until the impaired system is back and the Pueblo Fire Department’s documentation is satisfied.
They patrol the property for fire, spot ignition sources and hazards before they catch, supervise hot work through the required 30-minute post-work hold, stay in contact with property management and dispatch, log every round, and call in first-response notification if anything ignites. Each Pueblo Fire Watch Guard is trained, background-checked, and carries NFPA and OSHA fire watch credentials, with added training for construction, healthcare, and industrial settings.
The Fast Fire Watch Company does, across Pueblo and the rest of Pueblo County. We field certified guards on site in under 3 hours, available 24/7, for impairments, hot work, construction, and special events, with Pueblo Fire Department-compliant documentation on every job.
Usually within a few hours of your call, and quicker still near the downtown core, the Riverwalk, or the steel plants, because our guards already work those corridors rather than driving in from out of region. The line is staffed 24 hours a day, year-round. Give us the address, what set off the need, and how long you expect to need coverage, and we will lock in a guard and a start time on the same call.
Any time a building’s built-in protection is impaired or hot work is live, Colorado requires a watch. That covers a sprinkler out of service under NFPA 25, an alarm offline under NFPA 72, welding or cutting under IFC Chapter 35 and NFPA 51B, and construction conditions under IFC Chapter 33 and NFPA 241. The Pueblo Fire Department enforces all of it under the International Fire Code as adopted by the City of Pueblo. Not sure your situation qualifies? Call and we will work through it with you before sending anyone.
It comes down to the property size, how many guards the code or your permit requires, and the patrol schedule you need to hold. There is no long-term contract, so you pay for the actual coverage window, whether that is one overnight shift during hot work or several weeks while a sprinkler system gets rebuilt. We quote a clear rate before any guard is dispatched, and we do not bury setup fees in it.
The guard works a fixed route on a set interval, scanning for smoke, heat, and any early sign of fire, and logs each pass with a time stamp and name. If fire breaks out, the guard calls 911 at once and runs the building’s evacuation plan. On hot work, the guard keeps an extinguisher in reach and stays on for 30 to 60 minutes after the torches go cold. That finished log is your coverage proof for the Pueblo Fire Department.
Usually they do. Pueblo steel, manufacturing, and rail-corridor buildings routinely pull alarm or sprinkler systems for upgrades, riser repairs, and equipment work, and under NFPA 25 and NFPA 72 a building cannot stand unprotected while those systems are down. A watch bridges the gap until repairs pass verification. We patrol large plants area by area through these projects and log every pass, leaving the property a clean record for the Pueblo Fire Department and the Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control.
Because among Pueblo fire watch companies, we put a trained guard on your property fast, staff the coverage around the clock, and document every round to the International Fire Code standard the Pueblo Fire Department enforces. Steel-mill and rail-corridor hot work, downtown masonry rehabs, Riverwalk events, hospital system shutdowns, we know the buildings and the inspectors who walk them. Call and you get a guard, a straight rate, and a record the fire marshal will accept.
Our Google Reviews
Fast Fire Watch provides fast and reliable services. Services are well-organized, communication is clear, and coverage is handled efficiently to meet client needs.
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Very Professional service. From booking service to ending service, the communication is always constant, clear and very professional. Guards are polite and do their job efficiently and well. Best company!
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My company did an amazing job. I love them all so much.
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Great company to work with!! They are honest.
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Very professional team and quality service. Exactly what you hope for in a company.
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Absolutely love the company and the great employees that does an amazing job! 10/10
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Recent Pueblo Fire Watch Jobs
Standpipe Impairment Fire Watch in Downtown Pueblo
An older office building in downtown Pueblo took its standpipe system offline for riser work, and the Pueblo Fire Department required a fire watch for the occupied building. We staffed two guards on a rotation covering the stair towers and the office floors under NFPA 25. Every patrol ran on GPS-tracked logs so the rounds were verified, and the building received a clean compliance packet once the standpipe was recharged and signed off.
NFPA 241 Fire Watch at a Pueblo Manufacturing Expansion
A plant expansion along the rail corridor ran with the permanent sprinkler system offline through construction. Hot work zones and welding on the structure meant the Pueblo Fire Department required IFC Chapter 33 and NFPA 241 coverage. Our guards worked overnight shifts, patrolling the active areas and the material laydown at set intervals with GPS-logged rounds. Extinguishers stayed staged at each cutting station, and the project closed with zero incidents and zero citations.
Emergency Alarm Outage — Medical Office Near Parkview Medical Center
A medical office near Parkview Medical Center lost its fire alarm when the control panel failed. With the system down, NFPA 72 called for a fire watch until it was repaired. We had a guard on site fast, walking 15-minute patrols through the exam suites, the records storage, and the mechanical room. Coverage held day and night until the replacement panel was installed, tested, and returned to service.
Fire Watch Services Near Pueblo
We provide certified fire watch guards in Pueblo and the surrounding area, on site in under three hours, 24/7. Explore our nearest service areas below.
Our Commitment to Your Peace of Mind
Our commitment to you comes from years of experience building relationships and trust with our clients.
We have:
- Years of experience securing buildings and events so that your people and assets are safe. We built our business and experience over many years and with thousands of clients.
- Our fire watch guards have walked thousands of miles on fire watch patrols using experienced fire professionals including former firefighters.
- Managed a growing network of local fire watch companies across the USA. We provide great service, deliver on our core values and are committed to ongoing training for our teams.
- Maintained a loyal core of fire watch staff and clients because of what we do and who we are.
- We have kept our promise to always deliver the most professional service and the best people to guard everything that’s important to you.
Your trust is earned. Your satisfaction is our reward. Secure your buildings with The Fast Fire Watch Company.
We've Got You Covered
Looking for coverage beyond Pueblo? Explore our Fire Watch Guard Services in Colorado or learn more about The Fast Fire Watch Company.
Last updated: July 2026