fayazdin
Mechanical
- Oct 5, 2001
- 9
Hello everyone.
I know this is HVAC Portal, but many of the consulting engineers design HVAC and Plumbing both.
I hope, I find someone from Las Vegas, who will understand the pain.
City of Las Vegas ask for water calculation on almost every project. I can understand on a new project that we can do water pressure calculations. How about tenant improvements? where no one knows how the building pressure calcluation were performed, no drawings, no data.
As I understand, as a Plumbing / Mechanical engineer, our responsibility is up to 5-feet from the building, but in Las Vegas, meteres are installed 100s of feet from the building and that becomes the responsibility of a civil engineer.
Has anyone came across this issue and how you resolve it?
Do we have to analyze the whole building to find pressure at the tenant's space? City of Las Vegas made me analyze the entire block (fixture units) in order for me to provide pressure at my tenant's space
I know this is HVAC Portal, but many of the consulting engineers design HVAC and Plumbing both.
I hope, I find someone from Las Vegas, who will understand the pain.
City of Las Vegas ask for water calculation on almost every project. I can understand on a new project that we can do water pressure calculations. How about tenant improvements? where no one knows how the building pressure calcluation were performed, no drawings, no data.
As I understand, as a Plumbing / Mechanical engineer, our responsibility is up to 5-feet from the building, but in Las Vegas, meteres are installed 100s of feet from the building and that becomes the responsibility of a civil engineer.
Has anyone came across this issue and how you resolve it?
Do we have to analyze the whole building to find pressure at the tenant's space? City of Las Vegas made me analyze the entire block (fixture units) in order for me to provide pressure at my tenant's space