Hello,
My sister's house in Queens was damaged during Hurricane Sandy last year. A tree fell on her overhead service and pulled the weatherhead and some of the riser conduit off of the building. The tree has since been removed, and the electrical service is currently still in a state of disrepair - although it has been re-connected and she is living in the house currently. This house is very old, perhaps 100 years old at this point. Most of the interior wiring is either original or very old. Most of the house has ungrounded outlets. I think the actual wiring is this sort of stuff that looks like AC/MC cable but has no ground (I've heard it called BX). There are no safety issues that I am aware of.
I know that here in Denver, if you make a repair like that on the outside of the building, as long as there are no safety issues that the inspector wouldn't make you bring the interior up to current code (it would be grandfathered in). My father is paranoid that we will be looking at a six-figure remodel in order to bring everything up to code, just to get a permit to repair the service drop. He wants to sell the house to avoid that. I think we can just hire someone to make the repair, and we shouldn't have to worry about the interior.
I am not familiar with NYC codes, so I can't make an informed recommendation. Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
James G.
My sister's house in Queens was damaged during Hurricane Sandy last year. A tree fell on her overhead service and pulled the weatherhead and some of the riser conduit off of the building. The tree has since been removed, and the electrical service is currently still in a state of disrepair - although it has been re-connected and she is living in the house currently. This house is very old, perhaps 100 years old at this point. Most of the interior wiring is either original or very old. Most of the house has ungrounded outlets. I think the actual wiring is this sort of stuff that looks like AC/MC cable but has no ground (I've heard it called BX). There are no safety issues that I am aware of.
I know that here in Denver, if you make a repair like that on the outside of the building, as long as there are no safety issues that the inspector wouldn't make you bring the interior up to current code (it would be grandfathered in). My father is paranoid that we will be looking at a six-figure remodel in order to bring everything up to code, just to get a permit to repair the service drop. He wants to sell the house to avoid that. I think we can just hire someone to make the repair, and we shouldn't have to worry about the interior.
I am not familiar with NYC codes, so I can't make an informed recommendation. Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
James G.