Water, Sewage & Effluent November December 2018 | Page 12

as hotels, have their own standards, which is further complicated by the regulations and standards of various local authorities and others. It is important to note that volume, such as water storage, is related to the number of people, and their resulting and relative usage — and flow — is related to how many fixtures are used simultaneously. I have been involved in the adjudication of projects that had gone wrong, and in most cases, it was because the designer made the wrong assumptions or based the design on the wrong design norms. is contrary to the national building regulations (NBRs), which stipulate that ‘one competent person’ designs the complete system from the furthest fixture, through the building, right up to the municipal sewer connection. And herein lies the problem. The fact that the design is ‘split’ causes serious problems in terms of responsibility when problems occur and nobody wants to take responsibility. In many cases where there is this split design of the internal and external systems, the design is not cost-effective and often, the two systems do not match. The result is that the internal and external systems are based on different design criteria, and since the designer of the external system does not know what is going on inside the building, the external designer provides piping where it is not necessary. Design assumptions The design assumptions are the most critical basis of any project. Any design manual, or any literature on standards and norms, will have a section titled ‘Definitions’, which are critical to the design elements. For example, the definition of the drainage piping inside a building is called a ‘discharge pipe’. The definition for the drainage piping from the building up to the municipal sewer connection is called a ‘drain pipe’, and from the connection with the municipality, it is called a ‘sewer’. The design criteria for a discharge pipe, drain, and sewer are all different. A set of so-called ‘discharge units’ for each fixture is used to size the internal building discharge piping, and the external drain from the building up to the sewer connection, from where the engineer bases the design on a flow rate of litres per second. The problem with the discharge unit method, is that the relevant table indicates the maximum number of discharge units per pipe diameter per gradient and not the minimum. The minimum is essential, though, as it must allow at least a minimum flow rate of 0.7m/s to allow for clean flow velocity to convey the effluent. Another problem with the flow table is that non-engineers select a larger pipe diameter, since this larger diameter pipe can be laid at less of a gradient. The fault here is that this looks only at the maximum number discharge units that the pipe can convey, instead of looking at the minimum flow rate for clean flow velocity. The solution? It was found that where one engineer designs the internal and external systems, this can be rationalised with significant cost savings. Historically, this is relevant to sanitary drainage, domestic water, and fire water systems, and the savings were always in the millions of rands. I have seen a project where the internal piping connection to the external system was 100mm internal diameter — which is the correct minimum diameter required in terms of the NBR — but the external system piping that it was connected to, had a 100mm outside diameter. The result was that the two systems’ piping did not match up, which caused serious and costly problems, and will continue to cause problems for the remainder of the life of the system. The fact that the design is ‘split’ causes serious problems in terms of responsibility when problems occur and nobody wants to take responsibility. It is essential that the internal and external systems are designed by one engineer, with one responsibility, and based on one set of design criteria and assumptions. When the drainage is one single drain connecting the building to the sewer connection, then the NBR design criteria is relevant, but when it is a drainage system connecting a number of outlets to the municipal connection, such as in a hospital or a townhouse complex, then it should be designed as per the design criteria of a township sewer, as it is basically an extension of the municipal services and requires a significantly higher competence to design and construct. Hospital sanitary drainage and water supply There are no specific design norms and standards for hospital sanitary drainage and there are no water regulations in the NBR. The building control office (BCO) does not require water drawings for ‘any building’, except for the fire water installation (but excluding fire sprinklers). There are presently no SANS standards for fire sprinklers. It is These various ways of calculating the flow rate is the cause of many misunderstandings and incorrect assumptions. Added to this is the fact that in most cases, the internal building drainage system is designed by one designer and the external drainage system by another. This 10 The challenges The barrier between the user and possible horrible contamination is a mere 75mm of water trap in the S-bend. Water Sewage & Effluent November/December 2018 www.waterafrica.co.za