Utility Site Works Risks in Multi-Let Buildings | Inteb

The Hidden Cost of Getting Utilities Site Works Wrong in Multi-Occupied Buildings

share iconShare

11 Jun 2026

In a single tenant building, site works can be difficult but contained. There is one occupier, one set of priorities and one programme to manage. In a multi-tenant building, the same job becomes something else entirely. Every meter move, supply alteration, reconnection or infrastructure upgrade now touches several parties at once, and the cost of getting it wrong is rarely limited to the job itself.

For property managers, asset managers and facilities managers, this is the part of site works that does not appear on a quotation. It sits in the disruption, the disputes and the delays that follow when a job is treated as a simple technical task rather than a coordinated programme. Understanding where that hidden cost comes from is the first step to avoiding it.

A utilities engineer in a yellow high-visibility vest crouching to inspect a multi-tenant electrical metering cabinet with a torch and schematic drawing, whilst a building manager walks past on a phone call holding documents, with an occupied office visible through an open doorway and an electrical schematic pinned to the wall

Site works in a multi-occupied building demand precision at every stage: the right engineer, the right drawings, the right metering cabinet and the right coordination with the building manager to ensure nothing happens to one tenant’s supply that the others have not been warned about.

What site works actually involves

Site works covers the physical and administrative activity that keeps a building connected and compliant. In commercial property this typically includes new supply connections, meter installations and removals, disconnections and reconnections, supply capacity changes, sub metering, and the infrastructure that supports electric vehicle charging, solar and wider energy upgrades.

None of these tasks happen in isolation. Each one usually depends on a network operator, one or more energy suppliers, an accredited installer and safe access to live parts of the building. The work on site is often the quickest element. The coordination around it is where time and money are won or lost.

Why multi-occupied buildings raise the stakes

A multi-tenant building multiplies every dependency. A reconnection that affects a shared riser can interrupt several occupiers. A metering change in one unit can expose errors in how the whole building is measured and billed. A planned upgrade can clash with a tenant fit out happening on the floor above. Works can also be cancelled at the last minute for a variety of reasons, potentially incurring abortive costs.

The people managing these buildings are rarely the ones holding a spanner. They are balancing leases, service charge budgets, occupier relationships and their own reporting lines. When site works goes wrong, it lands on their desk as a tenant complaint, a billing query or an unexpected cost, long after the technical work has finished.

A site manager or project coordinator in a site office reviewing a Tenant Fit-Out Programme timeline with red-circled delays and a standing charges invoice, alongside a Project Programme Timeline Chart showing delayed milestones, with a kVA Load Assessment pinned to the noticeboard, clipboards on the wall behind him and a commercial development under construction visible through the window

The hidden cost of getting site works wrong reveals itself here: delayed fit-out programmes, standing charges accumulating on circled invoices and a kVA load assessment that should have been resolved weeks ago, all landing on the desk of the person responsible for making it right.

Where the hidden cost comes from

The real cost of utilities connections rarely sits in the physical works themselves. It sits in the assumptions, the timing and the lack of clarity at the start. Poor early understanding of electricity, gas and water demand often leads to incorrect capacity assumptions. In particular, kVA miscalculations and incorrect supply capacity design can result in systems being undersized or significantly over specified. This leads to redesign, reinforcement works or costly late stage changes once projects are already underway. Utility constraints and network reinforcement requirements can create significant programme disruption.

The biggest commercial impact is often delayed tenant occupation. In some cases the delays are not minor. They can extend by months rather than days or weeks. This directly impacts:

  • Rental income start dates
  • Fit out and mobilisation programmes
  • Tenant readiness and contractual handovers

Even after completion, hidden costs continue:

  • Ongoing standing charges on oversized or inefficient connections
  • Billing errors, incorrect tariffs and estimated reads
  • Ongoing issues where supply capacity does not match actual operational demand
  • Misalignment between landlord and tenant utility responsibility

These issues often persist for years without active review or validation. In most cases the root cause is not delivery failure, but unclear briefs, poor load assessment and a lack of coordination at the outset. The reality is that the cost of utilities is rarely the connection itself. It is the impact on time, income and certainty.

In almost every case, this is not a failure of the physical work. It is a failure of planning, coordination and ownership. By engaging a specialist from the outset and being clear about the objectives, much of it can be avoided.

Three utilities project professionals in a bright meeting room reviewing a Load Assessment Summary, a Meter and MPAN Schedule and a colour-coded multi-utility site drawing, with a Programme Timeline and a DNO Application Tracking dashboard on a laptop also visible, and a site photograph with a supply date sticky note pinned to the wall behind them

De-risking utility site works starts well before anyone sets foot on site: load assessment, MPAN scheduling, DNO application tracking and programme timeline alignment all resolved at the table, not discovered at the cabinet.

How to de-risk utility site works

The buildings that avoid hidden utility costs treat site works as a managed process rather than a series of disconnected tasks. Whether it is a new tenant moving in, a meter exchange, a supply upgrade, a landlord to tenant transfer, or the isolation of a vacant unit, the same principle applies. The earlier the process is managed, the lower the risk of delays, errors and unnecessary costs.

A few practical steps can make a significant difference:

  • Engage a utility specialist early. Many utility issues are only discovered once a project is underway. Early involvement helps identify risks, validate information and manage the process from start to finish.
  • Define the objective clearly. Are you accommodating a new tenant, increasing electrical capacity, separating landlord and tenant supplies, removing a redundant meter or reducing costs? Understanding the end goal prevents unnecessary work and delays.
  • Validate meter and supply information. Never assume utility records are accurate. Incorrect MPANs, MPRNs, meter serial numbers, supply capacities, addresses and billing details are common causes of delays, incorrect billing and unnecessary administration.
  • Confirm supply capacity requirements. Many sites either overestimate or underestimate their electricity requirements. Understanding the actual kVA requirement can prevent both excessive standing charges and future operational constraints.
  • Maintain proactive communication between all parties. Successful utility projects depend on effective coordination between property managers, landlords, tenants, energy suppliers, metering providers and Distribution Network Operators (DNOs). Delays often occur because one party is working with different information, waiting for an action, or simply unaware of programme requirements.
  • Manage supplier, metering and DNO communications proactively. Appointments, applications, site access arrangements, industry data updates and energisation activities all require active management and follow up. Assuming someone else is managing the process is often where problems begin.
  • Check for redundant supplies and meters. Vacant units, removed equipment and isolated services can continue attracting standing charges if supplies remain registered and live within industry systems.
  • Validate bills throughout the process. Incorrect tariffs, duplicate accounts, estimated reads and billing against the wrong meter are all common issues that can create unnecessary costs.
  • Plan around occupation dates. Utility readiness should be aligned with tenant fit out and occupation programmes. A building can be physically ready, but without active and correctly registered utility supplies, tenants cannot operate.

A property manager on the phone with a concerned expression, reviewing a Utility Invoice for a vacant unit showing accumulated standing charges totalling £745, an Energy Supplier notice of pending disconnection, and a handwritten note reading "Unit [ID] stripped out month ago, supply assumed removed," with a Vacant Units management dashboard visible on a desktop monitor showing multiple amber-flagged entries including one marked "Flagged: Automated Check Late"

The hidden costs of poor utility site works coordination rarely announce themselves cleanly: they arrive as unexpected invoices, disconnection notices and handwritten notes explaining that a supply everyone assumed had been removed is still running and still billing.

Common examples of hidden costs

A property manager provides incorrect meter or address details when arranging a tenancy change. The account is opened against the wrong supply, resulting in billing disputes, delayed occupation and weeks of administration to resolve the issue.

A retail unit is stripped out and its electricity supply isolated internally. Everyone assumes the supply has been removed, but the meter remains registered and the supply remains live within industry systems. Several months later, standing charges have accumulated against an empty unit that has consumed no energy at all.

The reality is that most utility related problems are not caused by complex engineering. They are caused by inaccurate information, poor communication and a lack of ownership of the process. Getting the basics right early, through good planning, accurate data and proactive communication between all stakeholders, can save significant time, cost and disruption later.

A five-person utilities coordination team meeting around a table with a large-format Structured Coordination Matrix and Tracker laid out showing task completion status across Supplier, Infrastructure Provider, DNO, Property Manager and Tenant columns, and a Supply Point Validation Dashboard visible on a laptop in the foreground

Inteb sits at the centre of the coordination matrix: managing the supplier, DNO, infrastructure provider, property manager and tenant workstreams simultaneously so that nothing falls through the gap between parties and no task is left marked “in progress” when it should be complete.

Where Inteb fits in

At Inteb, we help clients remove the uncertainty from utility site works. Acting as a single point of coordination, we work with property managers, landlords, occupiers, suppliers, metering providers and Distribution Network Operators (DNOs) to ensure utility processes are delivered efficiently, with accurate data and minimal disruption.

Our role often starts long before any physical change takes place. We help clients:

  • Define utility requirements and project objectives
  • Ensure data is available, accurate and properly commissioned before any applications or changes are made
  • Validate meter, supply, address and billing information
  • Assess electricity supply capacity and kVA requirements
  • Identify redundant supplies, meters and unnecessary standing charges
  • Manage supplier, metering and DNO communications
  • Coordinate tenancy changes, meter exchanges, disconnections and supply adjustments
  • Validate utility costs and challenge billing errors
  • Track progress and keep all stakeholders aligned throughout the process

Most utility issues are not caused by complex engineering problems. They arise because information is incomplete, data is not properly commissioned, responsibilities are unclear, or communication breaks down between multiple parties.

By providing independent oversight and proactive management, Inteb helps clients avoid delays, reduce administrative burden, minimise utility cost leakage and ensure that buildings are ready for occupation when they need to be. The result is greater certainty, better outcomes and fewer surprises.