Our site survey and preparation service in Yangon is the quiet engine behind smooth electrical and solar projects. Before a single conduit is fixed or a panel is lifted, we map the realities of your site—space, structure, power quality, access routes, safety constraints, and utility rules—so the design fits the building, not just the brochure. Across Downtown, Hlaing Thar Yar, Insein, Tamwe, South/Okkalapa, Thaketa, and the Thilawa SEZ, we tailor surveys to urban density, older building stock, and Yangon’s monsoon rhythm, turning uncertainty into a clear, build-ready plan.
The engagement begins with measured data. We review your energy bills to understand load shapes and peaks, and where relevant we log voltage, frequency, and outage patterns to quantify grid stability. Existing electrical infrastructure is assessed from the service head to the main distribution board: meter position and sealing requirements, earthing condition, breaker sizing, spare ways, heat marks, and any history of nuisance trips. These findings define what can stay, what must be upgraded, and how new equipment will integrate without tripping protection or overloading conductors.
Roof and structure come next. For solar candidates, we measure roof orientation and tilt, map shading with sun-path methods, and examine trusses, purlins, and waterproofing. In Yangon’s mix of RC slabs, metal decks, and tile roofs, we specify appropriate mounting interfaces and note where flashing or membrane repairs are needed before work proceeds. For ground installations or plant rooms, we check slab capacity, drainage paths, clearances, and equipment access so that foundations, cable routes, and ventilation are settled before procurement. Where buildings are occupied—hotels, clinics, retail—we plan phased work windows and temporary isolations to keep operations running safely.
Safety and access planning are embedded in the survey rather than tacked on later. We identify working-at-height zones, anchor needs, scaffold or lift options, and safe exclusion perimeters. Inside, we trace cable paths that avoid hot spots and sharp bends, verify ceiling voids and risers for serviceable access, and ensure future maintenance won’t require destructive works. If a generator, UPS, or hybrid inverter is already on site, we document the changeover scheme and protective devices so new circuits coordinate correctly and keep fault energy localized.
Utility coordination in Yangon has its own tempo, so we front-load it. We confirm meter location constraints, potential export limits for PV, anti-islanding settings, and any application forms or lead times you should expect. For projects that will increase demand, we calculate prospective short-circuit levels and diversity so conductors and protection are sized correctly from day one. Parallel to that, we reserve capacity for growth: spare breaker ways in key boards, oversized containment on strategic runs, and straight service corridors that make future upgrades cheaper and faster.
Documentation is the tangible outcome you can build from. You receive a concise report with photos and measurements, a site layout showing proposed equipment positions and clearances, a draft single-line diagram with preliminary breaker and cable sizes, and a preparation checklist assigning responsibilities for prerequisite works—roof patching, earthing upgrades, DB reorganization, or civil plinths. For solar, we include preliminary stringing within safe DC voltage windows and a shading summary that explains seasonal effects. For electrical upgrades, we lay out protection coordination targets and recommended RCD/RCBO placement for wet areas and portable-equipment circuits.
Because compliance is a moving target, we align our recommendations with recognized low-voltage practice and follow domestic guidance. For official updates and policy resources, the Government of Myanmar’s Ministry of Science and Technology maintains an authoritative portal at https://myanmar.gov.mm/ministry-of-science-and-technology. Anchoring the plan to authoritative sources helps with inspections, insurance, and long-term safety audits without adding red tape to your schedule.
Training and communication keep installation days calm. We brief facility teams on isolation points, temporary signage, and housekeeping standards, and we agree on working hours to minimize disruption in busy Yangon environments. Where essential loads must remain live—cold rooms, POS, servers—we propose bypasses or temporary feeds and mark them clearly in the method statement. This reduces downtime, avoids last-minute improvisation, and makes inspection day satisfyingly uneventful.
In short, preparation is performance insurance. By discovering constraints early, coordinating with utilities, planning safety and access, and producing clear diagrams and checklists, we turn risk into a predictable schedule. The result is a faster, cleaner installation that lasts longer through Yangon’s monsoon seasons, protects people and equipment, and leaves your property ready for future upgrades without costly rework.