Opportunity

El Paso Water Ionwave #RFS39-26

Engineering Services for Northwest Surface Water Treatment Plant (10-20 MGD) – El Paso Water

Posted

June 22, 2026

Respond By

July 29, 2026

Identifier

RFS39-26

NAICS

541330

El Paso Water - Public Service Board is seeking qualified engineering consulting firms for the planning, design, permitting, and bid services of a new Northwest Surface Water Treatment Plant in Vinton, Texas. - Government Buyer: - El Paso Water - Public Service Board (EPWater) - Scope of Work: - Planning, design, and bid support for a new surface water treatment plant with a minimum capacity of 10 million gallons per day (MGD), expandable to 20 MGD - Site improvements, raw water intake, pre-sedimentation basins, rapid mix/flocculation, sedimentation basins, ozonation, biologically active filters, chlorine contact basins, chemical handling, finished water storage, pumping, mechanical, electrical, instrumentation, SCADA integration, and cybersecurity coordination - Services Requested: - Professional engineering consulting services for all phases of plant development - Notable Requirements: - Team must include registered professional engineers in Texas with at least 8 years of relevant experience in surface water treatment plant projects - Firms must be properly registered to perform work in Texas - Familiarity with Texas Water Development Board (TWDB) requirements and subject to audits by the Texas State Auditor's Office - No specific OEMs or vendors are named in the solicitation - Project is funded through a TWDB grant

Description

El Paso Water (EPWater) is soliciting proposals from qualified engineering consulting firms for the planning, design, and bid services of a new surface water treatment plant. The plant will have a capacity of at least 10 MGD, expandable up to 20 MGD, and will be located adjacent to the existing Upper Valley Water Treatment Plant in Vinton, Texas. The scope includes site improvements, raw water intake, pre-sedimentation basins, rapid mix and flocculation, sedimentation basins, ozonation, biologically active filters, chlorine contact basins, chemical handling facilities, finished water storage, pumping, mechanical, electrical, instrumentation, and control. The work is funded through a grant agreement with the Texas Water Development Board (TWDB), and firms must be familiar with TWDB requirements and subject to audits by the Texas State Auditor's Office.

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