The Princeton Labor - DOE Contractor supports the Department of Energy’s mission to advance energy security, scientific discovery, and environmental stewardship through specialized infrastructure and technical services. Core priorities include maintaining and modernizing critical research facilities...
The Princeton Labor - DOE Contractor supports the Department of Energy’s mission to advance energy security, scientific discovery, and environmental stewardship through specialized infrastructure and technical services. Core priorities include maintaining and modernizing critical research facilities, ensuring regulatory compliance in hazardous environments, and enabling cutting-edge physical and engineering research. Key programs focus on facility operations at DOE national laboratories, nuclear safety systems, and environmental remediation, with strong emphasis on mission-critical construction, instrumentation, and scientific support services.
The agency procures a broad spectrum of construction, engineering, and technical services to sustain complex scientific infrastructure. Commercial and institutional building construction dominates, reflecting ongoing facility upgrades and maintenance. Engineering and architectural services are routinely contracted to support facility design and integration, while specialized manufacturing and testing services for aeronautical systems, transformers, and wiring devices underscore reliance on high-reliability components for research environments. Contract structures frequently involve sources-sought notices and presolicitations to gather industry input before formal solicitations, indicating a deliberate, collaborative acquisition approach.
Primary procurement targets include commercial construction, architectural and engineering services, hazardous waste treatment, and precision manufacturing of instrumentation and electrical systems. The agency actively engages small business and local area set-asides, particularly for construction and environmental services, signaling a commitment to fostering regional economic development and vendor diversity. Vendor relationships are built around technical expertise in regulated environments, with preference for firms experienced in DOE compliance frameworks, nuclear-grade fabrication, and environmental remediation protocols.
Organized under the Department of Energy, this contractor entity operates as a mission-support arm for DOE’s national laboratory complex, with no fixed geographic footprint but a nationwide operational scope. Procurement vehicles include indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contracts, job order contracts, and presolicitation-driven acquisitions to ensure agile, responsive support for evolving scientific and operational demands.