For Structural Engineers · Pre-Permit Review

Pre-Permit Structural Review That Catches the Discontinuities

Plan reviewers will trace your load paths. Helonic does it first.

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

Structural pre-permit review fails on the same items every time: a lateral element that doesn't continue through the framing plan, a connection detail referenced but not drawn, a calculation summary that doesn't reconcile with the deflection criteria in the spec. Helonic was built around the specific patterns structural plan reviewers most often flag - calibrated against AHJ correction notices and structural peer review comments across firms.

How Helonic helps

Traces load paths automatically

Helonic tracks gravity and lateral load paths from roof to foundation, flagging any level where continuity breaks.

Connection detail completeness

Every detail callout on the framing plans is checked against the detail sheets. References to non-existent details surface immediately.

Schedule reconciliation

Beam, column, and footing schedules cross-checked against the framing plans and sections. Discrepancies surface as findings.

Code citation verification

Code citations in general notes are checked against the actual adopted codes for the project's jurisdiction and edition.

Where structural plan check actually catches you

Most structural drawings are technically correct. What plan reviewers flag is documentation discipline - load path continuity from level to level, the consistency of beam call-outs between the framing plan and the schedule, whether the connection detail referenced by every moment frame actually exists in the set. These are exactly the items a human reviewer has the hardest time catching consistently across 80+ structural sheets.

Structural pre-permit workflow

1

Upload the structural set and calculations

Drawings, schedules, and calc summary all indexed together.

2

Run pre-permit checks

Load path tracing, schedule reconciliation, code citation verification - all in parallel.

3

Review by severity

Hard issues first (missing details, broken load paths), then documentation issues.

4

Resolve and re-run

Address findings, re-run, and confirm clean before permit submission.

Example issues Helonic catches

Real-world issues detected by AI analysis, specific to structural engineers running pre-permit review:

Moment frame at grid 3 shown on S-201 (Level 2) but no corresponding moment connection at the same grid on S-202 (Level 3) - lateral discontinuity

Beam call-out W18x40 on S-101 framing plan but the beam schedule lists W18x35 for the same mark

Detail callout 5/S-501 referenced from 14 locations but S-501 only contains details 1–4

Column C-12 shown on framing plans but missing from the column schedule

Footing F-3 dimensions don't match between the foundation plan and the footing schedule

General note 4 cites ASCE 7-10 wind loads but the project is permitted under ASCE 7-16

Key features for this workflow

Gravity load path continuity tracing across all framing levels

Lateral system completeness check (braces, moment frames, shear walls)

Connection detail reference integrity

Beam, column, footing schedule reconciliation with framing plans

ASCE 7 wind and seismic citation verification against jurisdiction

Structural code edition adoption tracking

What construction professionals told us

Structural engineers we talked with said the most painful plan check comments are the ones where the AHJ caught something that just slipped through documentation discipline - not a design error, but a reference inconsistency that any second reviewer would have flagged.

Conversations with licensed structural engineers and structural peer reviewers across building, bridge, and institutional projects.

FAQs

Does Helonic do structural calculations?

No - Helonic doesn't recompute beam sizes or perform structural analysis. It checks documentation completeness, consistency, and code citation accuracy against what your calculations specify.

Can it handle existing-building structural drawings?

Yes - Helonic adapts to as-built drawings with existing condition annotations and demolition documentation.

What about post-tensioned slab drawings?

Helonic checks PT documentation discipline (tendon profile callouts, anchor details, stressing sequence notes) at the same depth as conventional structural.

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 licensed structural engineers and structural peer reviewers across building, bridge, and institutional projects.

Last reviewed by Manas Gandhi · May 2026

Other use cases for structural engineers

Pre-Permit Review for other roles

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