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Inside a Full-Scope Electrical Build Across Multiple Jobsites

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No two jobs we run are the same - and lately, that's been on full display. We've been bouncing between residential builds, commercial facilities, and everything in between. Rough-in work, service equipment, lighting upgrades, ceiling fan installation, conduit runs in industrial spaces. It's a full slate, and we're here for it.

On the residential side, we handled the complete electrical scope for what looks like a barndominium-style build - service equipment mounted and ready for inspection, recessed lighting laid out clean through the interior, and finishing fixtures installed throughout. The bathroom got a pair of matching vanity light bars above wood-framed mirrors. The covered outdoor patio area has wall-mount lantern sconces flanking the entry door with a ring chandelier hung from the vaulted metal roof ridge. Inside, a large three-blade ceiling fan was mounted to a shiplap ceiling with exposed wood beams and recessed cans surrounding it. Every fixture choice fits the space.

The kitchen area of another new construction build shows pendant lighting, gooseneck wall sconces, and recessed cans all roughed in and installed - still under protection wrap, but the layout is exactly right. That kind of lighting plan has to be thought through early in the build. Get it wrong in rough-in and you're cutting drywall later. We plan it out so it lands right the first time.

On the commercial side, we were in an industrial facility running conduit up high walls next to 600-volt equipment - that's not a job for shortcuts. Multiple runs of EMT conduit organized and secured to the wall, a panel mounted at floor level, and a scissor lift to get the work done safely at height. The facility lighting overhead tells its own story - linear LED fixtures mounted throughout the open bay ceiling, properly spaced for even coverage across a large operational footprint. That's commercial new construction wiring and commercial lighting services working together the way they should.

We also set a temporary meter base for a new job getting ready to kick off - power to the site before anything else can happen. It's one of those unglamorous steps that every project depends on. Whether it's the first piece of equipment we set or the last fixture we hang, the standard stays the same from start to finish.