Water, Sewage & Effluent January February 2019 | Page 14

14 flickriver.com Backflow in a drainage system is also a serious health threat — specifically, backflow from the municipal sewage system. In a normal house, plumbers provide a gully between the house and the municipal sewage connection to act as an overflow facility so that when there is a blockage in the municipal sewer, the sewage can push back and overflow from the gully of the next nearest house. This is in accordance with SANS10400-P deem-to-satisfy rules. But this can create a serious health risk and a very unpleasant situation or ‘nuisance’, as described in SANS10400-P: P2. The maintenance services of municipalities are notoriously below standard, and municipal maintenance can take a long time to arrive to clear the blockage. The occupants of the house are then forced to live with an extremely unhealthy situation, with a potential health threat until the blockage is cleared. I have personally seen sewer overflows in the street that took days before being cleared. It is important that the design engineer of a hospital checks where any backflow may occur — evident from where the separate horizontal wastewater discharge pipe exits from the building, and then the backflow overflow inside the building and out of the showers or baths. The horizontal collector pipes below the ground floor of a hospital shall be separate for soil fixtures and separate for the wastewater fixtures, and if there is a collector pipe outside of the building for soil and waste combined, then an overflow facility is essential — at least on the wastewater drain pipe outside the building. A gully is a very unhygienic fixture. Most of the time, it is extremely dirty and germ-ridden and should not be used in a hospital. I have used a normal 110mm-diameter junction in line with a 110mm-diameter vertical pipe with a cap 150mm above the ground level; the cap can pop out easily and release any backflow from upstream or downstream. I call it a ‘dry overflow facility’, which allows the backflow to overflow outside the building, which is normally in a garden area. It is normally possible to provide a drain pipe from this area to prevent an unpleasant situation. There are so-called backflow fixtures that work like a non-return valve in a water system, but this can only stop the backflow — it cannot The design and position of the sluice room should also be considered and provided with an exhaust system for sanitary drainage to prevent contaminated air from entering passages where medical staff, patients, and visitors walk. Backflow prevention A clogged stack (vertical drain) affects other plumbing fixtures and can cause contamination. let it overflow unless it has a facility such as a pump to force the backflow out. However, such a facility stops the flow from the building and causes the fixtures to overflow inside the building if used while the downstream pipe is blocked. Yet, it can be used as a solution in some cases. The dry overflow pipe arrangement with the pop-up cap to allow backflow from both upstream and downstream to overflow outside the building, is very simple and economical, and consists of only some piping, a 90-degree junction, a cleaning eye cap, and a bit of concrete. The pipe arrangement for the overflow facility can also be designed to create a double cleaning eye, to rod both ways. I have found that it is essential to have a rodding facility where pipes exit from the building, and to have a facility that allows rodding both downstream and upstream. Floor drains There are wonderful floor drains on the market that do not have a fixed Water Sewage & Effluent January/February 2019 P-trap, and these are very popular in kitchens and elsewhere in the hospital. These floor drains allow you to remove the top and then have a 110mm (or less) direct opening into the drainage system to enable you to do rodding without having an obstruction such as a P-trap. What kitchen designers and other designers do not realise, is that you then have a direct connection with the most awful germs to the rest of the total sanitary drainage system, right up to the municipal sewage treatment works — and all those germs escape through the open floor drain in the hospital’s kitchen. Kitchen floors should not have these types of floor drains which allow direct contact with the sanitary drainage system. Instead, kitchens should be fitted with floor drains with suitable metal grids and a channel to discharge into a water trap, designed in a way that permanently isolates the kitchen area from the sanitary drainage system, to prevent serious contamination of the kitchen environment. The ‘old’ building drainage systems The previous building regulations for sanitary drainage systems required full anti-syphonic ventilation pipes. This meant that every fixture had to have what we now call ‘trap ventilation’. The anti-syphonic pipes were almost an upside-down replica of the drainage piping below it. The pipes were not connected on the horizontal branch pipes but went directly upwards from the trap of the fixture (which is why it is called trap www.waterafrica.co.za