Water, Sewage & Effluent January February 2019 | Page 13

About the author Vollie Brink (Pr Eng, MSAICE, MPMISA, MFEASA) is one of the industry’s longest-serving wet service engineers. He continues to serve on SABS committees and has been involved in the Green Building Council’s Green Star rating system. Brink continues to consult for various organisations while enjoying a well-deserved retirement. It’s all about relevance and applicability. There are only seven specific regulations relating to performance and there are more than 30 deem-to-satisfy rules, which are not relevant to rational design. By definition, a regulation is compulsory and any design must comply with it. To the contrary, deem-to- satisfy rules are merely a recipe for how to comply with the performance. For this reason, I propose another element, which I call ‘principles’. A principle is important, as it is a guide for good practice and a means of preventing potential problems. Principles of rational design www.waterafrica.co.za Water Sewage & Effluent January/February 2019 13 innovations One of the principles is that, in horizontal situations such as horizontal branch pipes and horizontal discharge pipes, the soil and wastewater pipes must be kept separately. This is critical to prevent raw sewage from discharging through a shower or bath in the event of a blockage in a combined horizontal branch pipe or collector horizontal discharge pipe inside a building and, more specifically, inside a hospital. This is a typical example of ‘design-to-prevent problems’, which is a basic responsibility of an engineered design by a registered professional engineer or technologist. A European factory representative once challenged me by saying, “It is not the duty of the engineer to design to prevent problems.” This is the most irresponsible statement I have ever heard from a technical person. The EU design standard allows soil and waste fixtures to be connected on the same horizontal branch pipe, but this is not allowed by SANS10400-P — in any system. Regulation states that in the case of a ‘group’, all the fixtures of a house, flat, or apartment shall be ‘separately connected’ one by one to a combined stack pipe or to the waste stack or soil stack in the case of the two-pipe system. In the case of a ‘range’, each range shall be connected separately to the combined stack pipe or otherwise to the two-pipe system separately to the soil or waste stack. The reason behind these deem-to-satisfy rules is to keep soil and wastewater separate in the horizontal position and to prevent raw sewage discharge from the lowest-situated fixtures such as the shower and bath, and thereby prevent a health risk. Water Sewage & Effluent January/February 2019 13