3 hours ago
Firestopping is one of those scopes that often looks simple on paper but turns complicated once the job starts. I’ve noticed that many contractors underestimate how much coordination and planning it actually needs, especially on commercial projects with multiple trades working at the same time.
One big issue is skipping a proper firestopping takeoff early in the estimating phase. Without clearly identifying penetrations, joints, and fire-rated areas, teams end up guessing quantities or relying on rough assumptions. That usually leads to missing scope, delays, or last-minute changes during inspections.
When firestopping is taken seriously from the start, it becomes easier to manage expectations and avoid rework later. A detailed takeoff helps everyone understand what needs to be sealed, where it’s required, and how it fits into the overall construction schedule.
Interested to know how others here approach firestopping. Do you plan it early or wait until the project is already underway?
One big issue is skipping a proper firestopping takeoff early in the estimating phase. Without clearly identifying penetrations, joints, and fire-rated areas, teams end up guessing quantities or relying on rough assumptions. That usually leads to missing scope, delays, or last-minute changes during inspections.
When firestopping is taken seriously from the start, it becomes easier to manage expectations and avoid rework later. A detailed takeoff helps everyone understand what needs to be sealed, where it’s required, and how it fits into the overall construction schedule.
Interested to know how others here approach firestopping. Do you plan it early or wait until the project is already underway?