Trinity Fire & Security Systems, a PTSG company, has been recognised by Honeywell Gent with a 25 Year Partnership Award – marking two and a half decades of collaboration across fire detection and security projects throughout the UK.
The award reflects a working relationship that has spanned significant change in both the fire and security sector and the wider built environment. Over 25 years, Trinity and Honeywell Gent have delivered critical fire and security systems across a broad range of client environments, supporting organisations in meeting their duty to protect people, property and operations.
Michael Anderton, Managing Director for PTSG Fire Solutions said: “Long-term partnerships of this kind are comparatively rare in a sector where procurement cycles, technology change and client demands regularly shift the landscape. That Trinity and Honeywell Gent have maintained a consistent collaboration over such a sustained period speaks to the foundations on which the relationship was built – shared standards, reliable delivery and a mutual understanding of what clients in high-stakes environments require.”
For facilities managers and building operators, the choice of supply chain partner in fire and security carries significant weight. Systems must perform to specification not just at installation, but throughout their operational life. Compliance requirements, maintenance obligations and the technical demands of increasingly complex buildings all place pressure on the contractor-supplier relationship. In that context, continuity and trust carry practical as well as commercial value.
Trinity Fire & Security Systems forms part of PTSG’s Fire & Security division, which delivers installation, maintenance and compliance services across a wide range of sectors. The business draws on PTSG’s national infrastructure to support clients with integrated service delivery, combining fire detection and suppression with the wider compliance requirements of complex estates.
The 25 Year Partnership Award from Honeywell Gent adds formal recognition to a relationship that has quietly underpinned a substantial body of work across UK buildings and facilities.



































