ASHRAE 90.1 and IECC violations rarely show up in early plan review because energy compliance is documented separately from the drawing set. The mismatches show up at commissioning, occupancy, or utility incentive verification. Here is what to look for at design.
ASHRAE 90.1 and IECC violations are unusual among construction drawing problems because they are almost never caught in early plan review. Most energy code compliance is documented in a separate COMcheck or COMPLY-24 file, a sustainability narrative, or an LEED energy model - and reviewers compare that documentation to the design narrative, not to the actual sheets in the contract set. The mismatches surface during commissioning, at certificate-of-occupancy review, or when the utility shows up to verify a rebate or incentive.
The pattern is consistent: the compliance documents describe an idealized version of the building, the drawings describe a slightly different building, and nobody compares them line by line until something is on the line.
Across projects pursuing ASHRAE 90.1, IECC, or state-stretch-code compliance, the same drawing-vs-compliance mismatches recur.
The cross-check is between the energy compliance documents (COMcheck output, energy model summary report, sustainability narrative) and the actual drawing schedules.
Energy code mismatches that surface at commissioning typically cost 10–50x what they would have cost in design - and projects pursuing utility incentives, LEED, or 179D commercial energy efficiency deductions can lose six- and seven-figure financial commitments when the as-built building doesn't match the documentation that earned the incentive.
Helonic compares envelope, lighting, and mechanical drawings against the project's documented compliance path so the documentation matches the drawings before either becomes the binding record.
Related guides, comparisons, and features for coordination teams.
The compliance paths (prescriptive, performance, energy cost budget) and what each requires.
How project teams structure energy compliance reviews from schematic through occupancy.
How sustainability documentation lines up - or doesn't - with the actual contract drawings.