Permitting & inspections · MEP engineering
Get the permit issued without revision cycles.
Plan-check corrections from the AHJ bounce back on Title 24 forms and equipment sizing, and each round adds weeks. The construction crew waits idle on the permit.
The reality
Permits slip on correction rounds.
The permit package goes to the building department, and the plan reviewer kicks back comments on the mechanical load calcs, the electrical service sizing, or a missing Title 24 compliance form. The EOR answers, resubmits, and waits in the queue again. Two or three rounds later, the permit is six weeks late and the GC is idle.
The operator owns permitting end to end. It assembles a complete plan-check package, submits to the AHJ portal, drafts engineer-of-record responses to each correction with the code citation, and tracks the entry through resubmittal to issuance — so corrections get answered in one clean round instead of three.
How the operator runs permitting & inspections
Permit B26-04417 · Package
assembling- Stamped MEP drawings attached
- Title 24 forms NRCC complete
- AHJ checklist verified before filing
01Assemble the permit package
Compiles the stamped drawings, load calculations, and Title 24 compliance forms, and checks the AHJ submittal checklist before filing.
Permit B26-04417 · Plan check
responding- Submitted to building department portal
- Comment 4 — service sizing answered
- Comment 7 — Title 24 cite drafted for EOR
02Submit and answer corrections
Files to the AHJ portal and drafts an EOR response to each plan-check comment with the governing code citation.
Permit B26-04417 · Issuance
tracking- Corrected set resubmitted
- All comments cleared by reviewer
- Permit issued — confirmed to GC
03Track to issuance
Resubmits the corrected set, follows the entry through the review queue, and confirms the permit is issued.
The outcome
−40% plan-check correction rounds per project
Permits issued without revision cycles slipping schedule.
- Complete packages filed against the AHJ checklist the first time
- Every correction answered with the governing code citation
- Permit status visible to the GC from submittal to issuance
Common questions
Permitting & inspections
- What does the Permitting & inspections operator do?
- The operator owns permitting end to end. It assembles a complete plan-check package, submits to the AHJ portal, drafts engineer-of-record responses to each correction with the code citation, and tracks the entry through resubmittal to issuance — so corrections get answered in one clean round instead of three.
- What impact does the Permitting & inspections operator have?
- −40% plan-check correction rounds per project. Permits issued without revision cycles slipping schedule.
- How does the Permitting & inspections operator work?
- Compiles the stamped drawings, load calculations, and Title 24 compliance forms, and checks the AHJ submittal checklist before filing. Files to the AHJ portal and drafts an EOR response to each plan-check comment with the governing code citation. Resubmits the corrected set, follows the entry through the review queue, and confirms the permit is issued.
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