I am renovating and wanted some advice. We need to rewire the whole place (four floors). We have decided to pull off the base molding and rewire there (hoping to save the plaster walls). We plan to put all electrical outlets in the base boards. Does anyone have any experience with this? If so, what challenges did you encounter?


Comments

  1. I’m in a similar situation with rewiring a Victorian house in Massachusetts. Several posters mentioned that code doesn’t allow outlets at baseboard height. However, from everything I’ve read, the NEC doesn’t have a minimum height.

    Is this a local or State code in Brooklyn that you are refering to? If it is NEC, can you provide us with a reference? Thanks. (BTW, almost all of the outlets in our house are at baseboard level).

    Thanks!

  2. Hi, Happy New Year Brownstoners

    Last year I used WCK Electric in a 4 story brownstone on Decatur Street, it was a massive job to rewire the entire house, I can tell you I highly recommend WCK, they were effecient,respected the time schedule given and cleaned and patched every hole they made. It can be costly, know way around that! But if this makes you feel better Con Edison comes out and inspects after the job is completed the permit is filed by the electrican.

  3. 12:06, this is 7:25. I wasn’t kidding. You really should rip them all out and start over. Re-wiring is not an easy job. And a bad contractor can really screw up your plaster patching job…

  4. That’s nonsense. Don’t rip anything out unless you have to or want to. If the walls and ceilings are in basically good condition, as mine are, a good handyman can patch them no problem and it’s like “it never happened”. Just prepare yourself for a big cleanup and a little horror at seeing your beautiful house punched full of holes. But afterward, when you’ve turned on the pretty wall sconce and are looking at your nicely repaired walls, it’ll just be a distant memory. That’s what I keep telling myself anyway 🙂

  5. If you’re going to rewire the entire place, please do it right. It’s going to be expensive and it’s going to be a hassle, but don’t go cheap. Yes they can run the new wiring along the baseboard, then up the wall to individual outlets, but somehow the wiring needs to go to the lights also, so you’ll have nasty cuts all over the place. In reality, you should rip all the plaster out and re-drywall the entire place. It’s the only way it’s going to look good.

  6. I’m in the process of having my 4 story house in Bed-Stuy completely rewired. There are outlets in the baseboard, a couple of which will be upgraded — maybe not to code but, without going into detail, there’s just nowhere else to put them. All the others will be disconnected and covered up with a blank. The new stuff will be in the wall, as required (this job is filed). The electrician has been running the wires and cables along the top of the baseboards. They haven’t disturbed/removed any of them or the tin ceilings (and there are tin ceilings throughout the entire house, even in the closets). It’s extra work to do it that way, and is generally more costly and very messy, but it IS possible. Anyway the electrician, so far, has done a terrific job of preserving the detail but there are A LOT of holes which, if you’re not doing a gut reno, you can expect… The electrician is WCK Electric, a recommendation from this forum.

  7. It is fine to run the new wiring behind the baseboards and come up to the code required heights at the outlets. And yes, an elctrician can often pull the new wiring through the old greenfield using the old wire to pull.