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Firestopping Coordination: Why Most MEP Penetration Failures Are Drawing Problems

Most firestopping failures are not field-installation errors. They are drawing-stage failures where MEP penetrations, UL system listings, and the rated assembly schedule don't agree. Here is what to look for in coordination.

Fire ProtectionMay 22, 2026

Most firestopping failures discovered at close-out inspection are not field-installation errors. They are drawing-stage failures where the actual MEP penetration shown on the mechanical, electrical, or plumbing sheet doesn't match any UL-listed through-penetration firestop system available for that wall or floor assembly. The installer in the field is left improvising, and the inspector flags the improvisation.

The drawings rarely tell the installer to do the wrong thing. They simply fail to tell the installer the right thing - and "the right thing" requires comparing the wall type schedule, the MEP penetration size and material, and the available UL-listed firestop systems together.

Where Firestopping Coordination Breaks Down

Across firestopping inspection rejections, the same five drawing-stage gaps recur.

  • Wall type schedule shows a 2-hour rated assembly, but the assembly's actual UL listing has no through-penetration firestop system for the penetration size required by the mechanical drawings.
  • Penetration size on the mechanical drawing (e.g., 24-inch round duct) exceeds the maximum penetration size in any UL-listed firestop system for the listed wall assembly.
  • Multiple penetrations within close proximity on the same wall assembly - the rated assembly's UL listing may not permit penetrations at that density, and the cumulative penetrations may de-rate the assembly entirely.
  • Rated wall terminates at a ceiling that is not also rated, and the drawings don't show how the rating continues to the structural floor above (or terminates with an approved head-of-wall firestop system).
  • Membrane penetrations on the unprotected side of a rated assembly (electrical outlet boxes, recessed lighting) not coordinated against the assembly's protection requirements - outlet boxes back-to-back across a 1-hour wall typically require an approved membrane-penetration firestop.

What to Compare in Review

The review needs to be a triangulation between the rated assembly schedule, the actual MEP penetrations on the mechanical and electrical sheets, and the project's specified firestop systems.

  • For every penetration through a rated wall or floor, confirm a UL-listed firestop system exists for that penetration size, material, and assembly type.
  • Verify the head-of-wall and bottom-of-wall conditions for each rated wall are specified using approved firestop joint systems matched to the actual structural deflection.
  • Cross-check the architectural rated-assembly schedule against the structural framing for continuity from floor to deck.
  • Compare electrical outlet box and recessed-lighting locations against rated-wall locations on the architectural plan to identify membrane-penetration coordination requirements.
  • Confirm the specification lists firestop systems by UL system number, not just generic 'firestopping by approved system' language that leaves the installer guessing.

Why This Cluster Matters

Firestop inspection failures are one of the most expensive close-out punch items in commercial construction - they require ceiling reopens, finish demolition, and re-coordination of every trade that closed in over the affected penetration. Helonic catches these conflicts during design by comparing the rated assembly schedule against MEP penetration drawings before any trade is in the wall.

Coordinate Firestopping Before Ceilings Close

Helonic compares MEP penetration drawings with wall type schedules, UL-listed firestop systems, and rated-assembly continuity to flag the mismatches that show up as failed firestop inspections at close-out.