When a service enters a building, when is concrete encasement required?

cppoly

Senior Member
Location
New York
When a service enters a building and a service disconnect is not provided immediately at the entrance, do the service conductors need to be concrete encased inside an electrical room when they travel a distance (10', 15', etc.) to a C/T cabinet w/ service switch? This is in NYC.
 
Service conductors must remain "outside the building" until they are "close enough" to the service disconnect. In WA state, the limit is 15 feet. If the conductors enter the building within the electrical room, and the disconnect is more than that distance from the point of entry, then yes, they must be within 2 inches of concrete.

I don't know about New York (state or city).
 
When a service enters a building and a service disconnect is not provided immediately at the entrance, do the service conductors need to be concrete encased inside an electrical room when they travel a distance (10', 15', etc.) to a C/T cabinet w/ service switch? This is in NYC.
Probably not but it depends on a few factors such as it be practicable and with the approval from the building department. The 10-4" EMT's from the ConEd end box above are 480 volt service entrance conductors and they're about 25' long.
Service Entrance.jpg
 
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