FOR GENERAL CONTRACTORS
Why Low Voltage Always Seems to Hold Up the CO And How to Prevent It
A delayed certificate of occupancy (CO) is the most expensive problem in commercial construction, and one of the most common causes is a low voltage sub who wasn’t ready. Here’s exactly how the cascade happens, and what a professional LV sub does to make sure it doesn’t.
By the Network Zen Team · Low Voltage & Structured Cabling · 7 min read
You’ve managed the schedule. The structural work is done, the mechanical and electrical trades are wrapping up, finishes are in. The owner is lined up, the tenant has a move-in date, and your final payment is tied to the certificate of occupancy. Then someone asks about the low voltage inspection, and the answer you get back is not the one you needed.
The data drops aren’t all certified. The cabling in two telecom closets hasn’t been tested and documented. The plenum-rated cable in the air-handling space above the third floor? Wrong jacket rating, flagged by the inspector. The AHJ is backed up for re-inspections. You’re looking at two weeks, minimum.
This scenario plays out on commercial projects across Southern California constantly. And the frustrating part is that it is almost entirely preventable, if the right LV sub is on the job from the beginning.
“Low voltage is often the last trade GCs think about during pre-construction, and the first one they regret not planning for more carefully when the CO is on the line.”