For Civil Engineers · RFI Reduction

Civil RFI Prevention Targeting the Tie-In and Demolition Patterns

Most civil RFIs come from tie-ins and existing conditions. Helonic targets both.

MG
Manas Gandhi · Co-founder & CTO, Helonic · Reviewed May 2026

Civil RFIs cluster around tie-in conditions - connecting new utilities to existing, transitioning new pavement to existing, matching new grades to existing. They also cluster around demolition scope ambiguity. Helonic targets both categories by surfacing ambiguous tie-in details and demolition limits at design time.

How Helonic helps

Tie-in detail completeness

Every utility tie-in checked for adequate detailing.

Demolition scope clarity

Existing pavement, curb, and utility demolition scope verified for clarity.

Existing condition ambiguity

Ambiguous existing-condition references surfaced as RFI candidates.

Phasing scope clarification

Phased construction scope ambiguities surfaced.

Civil RFI clustering

Civil RFIs cluster more tightly around specific patterns than other disciplines. Tie-ins to existing utilities at unmarked depths and conditions; demolition limits at existing pavement; existing utility relocation scope; and transition details between new and existing. Helonic targets all four.

Civil RFI prevention

1

Pre-IFC run on civil set

Run before issuing IFC drawings.

2

Tie-in and demolition focus

Detection prioritized on the highest-RFI-volume categories.

3

Resolve as drawing revisions

Add details, clarify scope before issue.

4

Lower civil RFI count in CA

Less unbilled construction-phase time.

Example issues Helonic catches

Real-world issues detected by AI analysis, specific to civil engineers running rfi reduction:

Utility tie-in at existing 8" water main shown but no tie-in detail provided - likely RFI

Existing pavement removal limit ambiguous at parking expansion - partial vs. full removal not clear

Existing storm sewer relocation scope not clearly indicated - RFI risk

Phase 1 to Phase 2 transition at existing curb not detailed - RFI likely

Demolition limit at existing tree T-5 ambiguous - protect in place vs. remove not clear

Existing utility depth at tie-in station 1+45 shown 'verify in field' but no contingent detail provided

Key features for this workflow

Civil-specific RFI pattern detection

Tie-in detail completeness audit

Demolition scope clarity check

Existing condition ambiguity surfacing

Phasing scope clarification

Survey reference verification

What construction professionals told us

Civil engineers we talked with said RFI prevention was about anticipating what the contractor would find in the field. They wanted a system that thought like a contractor walking the site.

Conversations with civil consulting engineers in CA roles.

FAQs

How much can it reduce civil RFIs?

Engineers we work with see 30–45% reduction with the largest reductions on projects with significant existing-condition complexity.

Does it work for greenfield sites?

Yes, though RFI reduction is smaller for greenfield because tie-in and demolition complexity is lower.

Can it predict the actual RFI text?

Helonic surfaces the documentation pattern that historically generates RFIs and suggests the design revision that resolves the ambiguity.

MG

Manas Gandhi

Co-founder & CTO, Helonic

Manas is the co-founder and CTO of Helonic, where he leads engineering and AI research for construction drawing analysis. He works directly with structural, MEP, civil, and fire protection engineers to translate the way they review drawings into AI systems that flag the issues that actually matter in the field. Before Helonic, he built machine learning pipelines for technical document understanding and has spent the last several years interviewing licensed design engineers and discipline leads to ground product decisions in real practice rather than industry assumptions.

Areas of focus
  • AI for technical document understanding
  • Cross-discipline coordination workflows
  • Code compliance automation (IBC, NEC, NFPA, IPC, IMC, ASCE)
  • Structural and MEP drawing review systems

How this page was researched: Conversations with civil consulting engineers in CA roles.

Last reviewed by Manas Gandhi · May 2026

Other use cases for civil engineers

RFI Reduction for other roles

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