Most electrical room failures discovered during inspection are coded into the drawings months earlier: NEC 110.26 working space violations, missing dedicated equipment space, undersized ventilation, and egress paths that don't satisfy two-exit requirements.
Electrical room failures discovered during AHJ inspection are almost always failures that were coded into the drawings months earlier. NEC 110.26(A)(1) working space depth, NEC 110.26(E) dedicated equipment space, ventilation sizing, and egress configuration are all decided during architectural and electrical drawing coordination - not during installation. The inspector is just the first person who measures.
What makes electrical rooms a high-frequency problem is that they sit at the intersection of architectural space planning, electrical equipment sizing, structural opening locations, and HVAC ventilation - and the room's footprint is usually set by the architect before the electrical engineer has sized the equipment.
Across thousands of construction drawing sets, the same handful of electrical room issues recur. Each is detectable in plan review.
Most of these conflicts survive review because the electrical room shows up on one set of sheets (E-series for equipment, A-series for the room, M-series for ventilation) and reviewers look at each in isolation.
Helonic flags NEC 110.26 working space, dedicated equipment space, and egress issues by comparing electrical equipment locations across the E-series sheets with architectural plans, structural openings, and mechanical pathways - so a misplaced panel or an intruding duct surfaces before drywall, not during the close-out inspection.
Related guides, comparisons, and features for coordination teams.
The 110.26 working space, dedicated equipment space, and headroom rules in plain language.
Code-required clearances around mechanical equipment and the same review logic for electrical.
How to coordinate electrical rough-in across architectural, structural, and other trades.