Most NFPA 13 sprinkler design failures are visible in 2D drawing review - obstruction violations, branch line clearance, hydraulic remote area assumptions, and storage commodity-class mismatches. Here is what to look for before the design is hydraulically calculated.
Most NFPA 13 design failures discovered at hydraulic-calculation review or AHJ submittal are failures that were already visible on the 2D drawings before the calculation was run. NFPA 13 obstruction rules, branch line clearance, hydraulic remote area placement, and commodity classification are all visible in plan review if someone is comparing the fire protection sheets against architectural, structural, and mechanical drawings together.
The reason these survive into final review is that fire protection is typically the last design discipline added - the sprinkler designer is laying out branch lines around a building that has already committed to ductwork, lighting, structural beams, and ceiling features. The conflicts are inevitable, and most are catchable on paper.
Per NFPA 13 (2022) and recent edition trends, these are the recurring issues that surface in submittal review.
The review needs to overlay fire protection sheets with architectural, structural, mechanical, and electrical drawings simultaneously - most obstruction problems are not visible on any single sheet.
Helonic compares fire protection drawings with architectural, structural, mechanical, and electrical sheets together - surfacing the obstruction, clearance, and classification conflicts that the sprinkler designer working in isolation can't see, and that the AHJ does see during permit review.
Related guides, comparisons, and features for coordination teams.
How to review the fire protection package across architectural, structural, and mechanical.
Reading branch lines, mains, hydraulic remote areas, and the NFPA 13 standard symbols.
How fire-rated walls, smoke-rated walls, and sprinkler design interact in the drawings.