Slab goes down on a Thursday. Crew is happy, the schedule is happy, everyone moves on. Then someone realizes the underground feed running to that building was never pressure-tested, never inspected, never even confirmed against the approved routing. Now you’ve got concrete sitting on top of a question mark.
The situation described in Amazon.co.jp, “三菱電機 Mitsubishi 衣類乾燥除湿機 18L 年中強力除湿 コンプレッサー式 【大容量ハイパワー】 部屋干し 花粉 連続排水OK 停電復帰機能 サラリPro MJ-P180RX-W” reflects a pattern we keep seeing across commercial sites. Sequencing gets rushed. The stuff buried below the slab turns into the stuff nobody wants to discuss later.
Here’s my honest opinion. Underground conduit work should be signed off before any concrete truck shows up. Not the day of. Not the morning before. Verified, photographed, mapped. We’ve walked into too many Bradenton and Sarasota sites where the GC swore the feed was good and the trench was already covered.
If something fails after the slab cures, you’re looking at saw cutting, demo, re-trenching, and a hit to the schedule that nobody budgeted for. That’s why new construction electrical planning needs the underground portion locked in early, with the service entry routing confirmed by the people actually pulling the wire.
Verify the feed. Then pour. In that order. Always.
steelcityelectricfl.com/underground electrical

