jar546
CBO
Regarding individually owned townhouses (not apartments under single ownership), NEC Section 230.3 prohibits service conductors from passing through an adjacent unit. However, considering electrical feeders are protected by an overcurrent device at their source, could someone clarify the specific NEC articles and relevant interpretations that address or implicitly prohibit a feeder for one townhouse unit from passing through the interior space (e.g., walls, ceiling, slab) of an adjacent, separately owned townhouse unit, accounting for considerations such as access for maintenance, firestopping, and the distinction between single-owner multi-family and individually parceled properties? Florida, for example, requires a townhome by definition to have its own property lines. I understand the IRC does not. When townhomes are built, I rarely see anything other than electric meters and service disconnects at the front of each unit. However, if in an apartment situation, they decide to put all the meters on one side of 4 units, for example, is it code compliant or appropriate to run the feeders through other units to get there? It makes no sense because you now have power inside a unit that it does not have control over.