HelonicHelonic

AI drawing review for electrical contractors

Verify panel schedules, coordinate conduit routing, and catch load calculation errors before installation begins.

What slows down electrical contractors

The recurring drawing problems behind most electrical field changes and RFIs.

Panel Schedule Mismatches

Panel schedules frequently disagree with one-line diagrams and equipment power requirements, creating costly field changes.

Conduit Routing Conflicts

Conduit runs clash with ductwork, piping, and structural elements in crowded ceiling spaces and vertical chases.

Load Calculation Errors

Circuit loading exceeds panel capacity or wire sizing is insufficient for the connected loads shown on equipment schedules.

How Helonic helps

From panel schedules to emergency power, Helonic reads every electrical sheet in your set.

1

Panel Schedule vs One-Line Verification

Cross-reference panel schedules against one-line diagrams and riser diagrams to flag mismatched breaker sizes, missing circuits, and inconsistent load designations.

2

Conduit Pathway Coordination

Detect where conduit runs conflict with ductwork, piping mains, and structural elements. Identify congested pathways that will create installation problems.

3

Lighting Layout vs Ceiling Coordination

Verify that light fixture locations align with the reflected ceiling plan and do not conflict with diffusers, sprinkler heads, or structural members.

4

Power to Equipment Matching

Ensure that mechanical equipment schedules, kitchen equipment lists, and other power loads match the circuits and voltage shown on electrical drawings.

5

Emergency Power System Review

Check that emergency and standby power systems serve all required loads per code, with proper transfer switch sizing and generator capacity.

Common issues we catch

The electrical conflicts and code gaps Helonic surfaces on every drawing set.

Panels & Circuits

  • Circuit overloading beyond panel capacity
  • Missing homerun designations on floor plans
  • Breaker sizing mismatches with wire gauge
  • Incomplete panel schedule load summaries

Coordination & Code

  • Switch and outlet placement conflicts with furniture layouts
  • Emergency vs normal power separation violations
  • Conduit routing through fire-rated assemblies without firestop
  • Missing GFI protection in required wet locations

ROI for electrical contractors

What electrical teams typically see after running drawings through Helonic.

SAVINGS
$25K–$150K
average per project from early issue detection
ISSUES CAUGHT
35+
electrical issues per drawing set
FASTER REVIEW
60%
vs. manual panel schedule checks

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Helonic check before electrical rough-in?
It verifies panel locations, conduit routing, and clearance requirements, flagging NEC 110.26 working-space violations, panel conflicts, and conduit clashes with structure or other trades, each with the sheet reference, before rough-in.
Does it check NEC working space and clearances?
Yes. It flags where panel and equipment working clearances do not meet NEC 110.26 and related provisions as drawn.
Can it catch conduit and panel coordination conflicts?
Yes. It flags conduit routing and panel placements that clash with structure, ductwork, or plumbing, the conflicts that drive field rework.
Does it need a 3D model?
No. It works on the 2D electrical and coordinated PDFs you already have.
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: Coordination checks reference NEC (NFPA 70) clearance and working-space requirements, panel and conduit routing, and the electrical-structural interfaces verified before rough-in. Examples are drawn from Helonic's review of electrical sets against the base building set.

Last reviewed by Manas Gandhi · May 2026

Keep exploring

Related guides and adjacent solutions.

Catch electrical conflicts before they hit the field

See how Helonic identifies panel schedule mismatches, conduit routing conflicts, and load calculation errors automatically.