67CarGuy
Well-known member
I'm in the process of planning and designing a new house / garage build on "raw" land - hasn't been touched in 40+ years, former agricultural field that was left to go wild, etc. Anyways, the civil engineers we hired to do the initial lot survey for permitting are showing the buried electrical service and town water running down two trenches under the driveway (not across the driveway, *along* the driveway the full length of it). To my thinking, this means anytime there's an issue with either service (about 300 feet from road to house) that means the driveway has to get dug up, and makes it somewhere between a hassle and an impossibility to get a vehicle out to the road / in to the house/garage. Granted, it's not something that I expect to happen very often (preferably never!), but if a buried line does need to be inspected / repaired for whatever reason, I'd really like to keep my driveway intact. Seems like burying the utilities off to the side of the driveway would make more sense - what am I missing here?
I'm either not using the right search terms or at least haven't found anything in the NEC / IBC / IRC that would confirm what's "correct". What's the GJ brain trust's take on this? For reference, I'm in Mass., so I'm presuming at least the water trench will end up below the frost line, which is likely deeper than any subsurface prep I would have done for the driveway. For additional reference, the driveway will be gravel, and have one ~45 degree curve in it. The only site work we've done so far is clearing trees and brush, and expect the driveway to be put in later this summer/fall.
I'm either not using the right search terms or at least haven't found anything in the NEC / IBC / IRC that would confirm what's "correct". What's the GJ brain trust's take on this? For reference, I'm in Mass., so I'm presuming at least the water trench will end up below the frost line, which is likely deeper than any subsurface prep I would have done for the driveway. For additional reference, the driveway will be gravel, and have one ~45 degree curve in it. The only site work we've done so far is clearing trees and brush, and expect the driveway to be put in later this summer/fall.
