AedinP
Member
- Location
- Pacific Northwest
- Occupation
- Electrician
Hi all,
I'm point-man on a medium size aquatic center with two buildings which have both have wall sconces/wallpacks along the entire length of the building. The boxes for the fixtures will be flush with the CMU face.
My first thought is to obviously connect the boxes with PVC horizontally as that makes the most sense; however there are several "columns" of solidly grouted cells which have a single #5 rebar going from down in the stem wall up to the top, and spec forbids us from having conduit in the same cell with rebar.
Second thought would be to feed them overhead above the ceiling, but it's a hard ceiling across the whole building so we can't have junction boxes in the ceiling from which we would drop down to the lights with flex or something.
Third and final thought, unless there's a better way, is to put two 90s (in and out) in the stem wall beneath each light fixture and connect them with PVC "U's" underground. This would just mean that essentially we are at 360 degrees of bends between each fixture. We have not yet started under slab electrical but we are putting rigid foam blocks in the stem walls before they pour to be able to turn up 90s inside the CMU cavity.
ANY ADVICE? I've never done boxes set in CMUs before and am making it work as I go. At least a discussion would be great as I have learned a lot from reading this forum.
Attached are a couple screenshots of the lighting print. Let me know if I need to clarify anything.
Aidan
I'm point-man on a medium size aquatic center with two buildings which have both have wall sconces/wallpacks along the entire length of the building. The boxes for the fixtures will be flush with the CMU face.
My first thought is to obviously connect the boxes with PVC horizontally as that makes the most sense; however there are several "columns" of solidly grouted cells which have a single #5 rebar going from down in the stem wall up to the top, and spec forbids us from having conduit in the same cell with rebar.
Second thought would be to feed them overhead above the ceiling, but it's a hard ceiling across the whole building so we can't have junction boxes in the ceiling from which we would drop down to the lights with flex or something.
Third and final thought, unless there's a better way, is to put two 90s (in and out) in the stem wall beneath each light fixture and connect them with PVC "U's" underground. This would just mean that essentially we are at 360 degrees of bends between each fixture. We have not yet started under slab electrical but we are putting rigid foam blocks in the stem walls before they pour to be able to turn up 90s inside the CMU cavity.
ANY ADVICE? I've never done boxes set in CMUs before and am making it work as I go. At least a discussion would be great as I have learned a lot from reading this forum.
Attached are a couple screenshots of the lighting print. Let me know if I need to clarify anything.
Aidan