How to review sleeve and penetration schedules for location, size, trade ownership, firestopping, structural openings, and installation sequence.
A sleeve or penetration schedule lists openings needed for pipes, ducts, conduits, cable tray, and other services passing through walls, slabs, beams, decks, and rated assemblies. It is most useful when every opening can be traced to a drawing location and trade owner.
The review goal is to confirm that openings are complete, correctly sized, structurally acceptable, and coordinated with firestopping before concrete, masonry, or framing work makes changes expensive.
Start by matching each schedule row to a plan mark, elevation, detail, and system route. Then verify that the opening size accounts for pipe outside diameter, insulation, movement, firestop system, sleeve material, and installation tolerance.
The most common sleeve errors are missing openings, openings placed from stale routing, sleeves that do not account for insulation, and penetrations through rated assemblies without a compatible firestop detail.
A good schedule is not just a list. It is a coordination record that connects layout, structure, MEP routing, and life-safety performance.
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.
How this page was researched: Penetration and firestop review points were checked against IBC Chapter 7 fire-resistance requirements and ASTM E814 (UL 1479) through-penetration firestop test methods. Examples reflect the sleeve conflicts Helonic most often flags when comparing penetration schedules with structural, MEP, and rated-assembly drawings on 2D sets.
Last reviewed by Manas Gandhi · May 2026
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