Above-Ceiling Coordination

MEP Plenum Analysis

Coordinate MEP systems, lighting, and structural elements in the ceiling plenum. Articulate cross-references reflected ceiling plans, mechanical plans, electrical plans, and fire protection drawings to catch conflicts in the most congested zone of any building.

Why Ceiling Coordination Matters

50%
of MEP clashes occur above the ceiling line
$20K
average rework cost for above-ceiling conflicts
100%
of ceiling zones analyzed across all sheets
6
systems coordinated simultaneously in each zone

How It Works

  1. 1

    Map the Plenum

    The AI reads structural plans for beam depths, architectural RCPs for ceiling heights, and section details to establish the available plenum depth in each zone.

  2. 2

    Layer MEP Systems

    Ductwork, sprinkler mains and branches, cable trays, conduit runs, and plumbing waste lines are extracted from their respective sheets and mapped into the plenum space.

  3. 3

    Detect Conflicts

    The system checks for spatial conflicts between all systems — ducts blocking sprinkler heads, lights conflicting with diffusers, cable trays crossing duct runs at the same elevation.

  4. 4

    Prioritize Issues

    Conflicts are ranked by severity, with sprinkler coverage issues and code violations flagged as critical, and aesthetic coordination issues like diffuser-to-light spacing flagged as advisory.

Key Capabilities

Duct vs Sprinkler Clearance

Verifies that supply and return ductwork maintains required clearances from sprinkler heads and mains, preventing coverage obstructions that fire marshals will reject.

Lighting vs HVAC Diffuser Conflicts

Cross-references the RCP lighting layout against supply diffuser and return grille locations to flag overlaps that would require field relocation of fixtures.

Cable Tray Routing Analysis

Checks that electrical cable tray routing doesn't conflict with ductwork, plumbing, or structural elements, and maintains required separation from high-voltage conduit.

Ceiling Grid Coordination

Verifies that all ceiling-mounted elements (diffusers, lights, speakers, sprinkler heads) align with the ceiling grid and don't create conflicts at grid intersections.

Access Panel Placement

Identifies equipment that requires maintenance access (VAV boxes, fire dampers, valves) and verifies that access panels are provided and don't conflict with other elements.

Plenum Depth Verification

Checks that the cumulative depth of all systems in the plenum doesn't exceed the available space between the structure above and the ceiling grid below.

Why This Matters

The ceiling plenum is where every discipline converges in the tightest space. HVAC ducts, sprinkler piping, electrical conduit, cable trays, plumbing waste lines, and structural members all compete for the same 18 to 36 inches of vertical space. When conflicts aren't caught in documents, they're discovered by the first trade to install — and every subsequent trade has to work around whatever got built first.

Above-ceiling rework is particularly disruptive because it affects the ceiling grid below. Moving a duct means moving the diffuser in the ceiling tile, which affects the lighting layout, which requires electrical rework. Articulate catches these cascading conflicts from the drawings before the first hanger is installed.

Related

See Ceiling Coordination in Action

Upload your RCPs and MEP plans to see what above-ceiling conflicts our AI catches.