I'm working in a 250-year-old house and the basement has a sump pump that is located right below the electrical service panel.
To install the sump pump, they just cut a hole in the concrete slab and threw a pump in a shallow dirt hole. I tried to dig to install a basin, but there's a huge granite rock right there, so there's no way to dig further.
So to access the service panel one must stand in water! I don't know if this complies with code or not, but it certainly feels wrong.
I don't want to move the electrical panel, as just too many electrical issues are grandfathered in, so moving the panel and the subsequent inspections will trigger a bunch of updates I'm not ready for. There's no slack in the wires, and there's no shut-off (other than the main breakers at the panel itself), so moving the panel would require calling the utility. These are all things I'll have to eventually do, but I'm trying to solve one issue at a time. The sump pump is really in the best location, as the whole basement slab has an incline so that it drains in that corner.
I could move the sump pump, and I own a concrete saw and an electric cement mixer, but I'd really like to avoid 3 days of cutting, digging, and carrying cement bags. Thus the idea of building a small 5' x 5' deck with pressure treated wood as a "lid" on the pump, that will also work as a dry surface to stand on while accessing the service panel.
Question: can I remedy the situation with building a wood platform over the sump pump hole? Would this comply with applicable electrical code?
All opinions appreciated.
- I own this house, but don't live in it yet. House is empty, not rented out or leased out. I am preparing to move into it soon.