Minnesota hospital EVS automation

Hospital cleaning robots for
Minnesota health systems

Autonomous floor scrubbers for hospital corridors, outpatient clinics, lobbies, cafeterias, and connected medical buildings across Minnesota. Built to help EVS teams protect standards even when staffing is tight.

Strong fit for Twin Cities campuses, Rochester medical facilities, Duluth hospitals, and regional systems across greater Minnesota.

Why this page exists

Minnesota hospitals need corridor coverage they can actually sustain

Most hospitals are not trying to replace EVS. They are trying to stop corridor and common-area cleaning from drifting whenever staffing drops, census changes, or overtime gets cut. That is exactly where autonomous scrubbers fit.

EVS labor pressure

Autonomous cleaning keeps high-square-footage routes covered when hiring and retention stay difficult.

Documented execution

Every completed run can be logged and reviewed instead of relying on manual paper trails.

Off-shift consistency

Night corridors, connectors, and lobby routes still get cleaned when staffing is thin.

Realistic scope

Robots handle repetitive floor routes while EVS staff stay focused on the work that needs people.

Minnesota market fit

Built for the health systems we sell into here

This approach is designed for regional hospitals, multi-site clinics, senior care campuses, and large outpatient footprints throughout Minnesota.

Twin Cities health systems

Built for large campuses, MOBs, and outpatient corridors serving Minneapolis, St. Paul, and surrounding suburbs.

St. Cloud and Central Minnesota

A strong fit for regional medical centers, attached clinics, and multi-building support services operations.

Duluth and Northern Minnesota

Well suited to hospitals, specialty clinics, and connected medical office buildings with long corridor runs.

Rochester medical campuses

Ideal for high-traffic common areas, lobbies, and outpatient zones where consistency matters every shift.

If you are evaluating a pilot for a Minnesota hospital, the fastest path is usually one robot in one corridor-heavy zone, then expand once EVS leadership and finance can see the usage and documentation.

Where robots fit

Best-fit hospital zones in Minnesota facilities

We only recommend autonomous cleaning where it makes operational sense. That keeps pilots credible and expansion decisions easier.

Zone
Fit
Why it works
Main corridors
Excellent
Highest labor-offset zone in most hospitals
Outpatient clinics
Excellent
Best after-hours or between-session cleaning window
Lobbies and waiting areas
Excellent
High-visibility areas that benefit from consistent presentation
Cafeterias and dining
Excellent
Repeatable spills and large open floor areas
Skyways and connectors
Excellent
Long straight routes are ideal for autonomy
Patient rooms
Manual only
Human EVS protocol still required
ORs and sterile zones
Manual only
Not appropriate for autonomous scrubbers
Isolation rooms
Manual only
Requires trained staff and clinical judgment

Pilot-first approach

What hospital leaders usually want to prove first

Pilot one corridor, lobby, or clinic wing before scaling system-wide

Generate timestamped cleaning documentation for every completed run

Keep EVS focused on patient rooms, disinfection, spills, and high-judgment work

Deploy with local Midwest support instead of remote-only service

Typical first deployment
Start areaMain corridor or clinic wing
Pilot window30 to 90 days
Primary goalStable, documented coverage
StakeholdersEVS, facilities, finance
Expansion pathMore zones, more buildings, shared reporting

Want to evaluate one Minnesota hospital pilot?

We can walk one facility, identify the best first zone, and show exactly how autonomous cleaning would support your EVS team before a broader rollout.