Water, Sewage & Effluent January February 2019 | Page 15

It is crucial to use the best and most robust drainage piping for heavy-duty high- maintenance drainage. Most of all, it must have excellent watertight and airtight joints that cannot pull apart with time. Sanitary drainage piping quality Before, we used cast iron above ground and clay pipes below ground, but this has changed to other materials: robust pipe material such as HDPE with welded joints is now used both below and above ground. What is important is that the pipe material must be robust with permanent leak-free connections for both above and below ground. The bottom line is, competent services design engineers are essential to best-practice systems design. The proposed definition of a competent services design engineer is a registered professional engineer or registered professional technologist with proven specialist experience in the design of hospital services, under the mentorship of a specialist Pr Eng or Pr Tech Eng with a minimum of five years’ experience. Anyone less qualified than that is not competent to deal with rational design.  contaminated air from entering passages where medical staff, patients, and visitors walk. Hospitals now have hand-washing facilities at frequent intervals, but there is a gap between the sanitary drainage system and the sterile spaces in the hospitals. It is important not to have long horizontal drainage piping in ceilings, as this does not allow for the minimum gradient of 1 in 60 inside the building and clashes with all the other services. Any horizontal drainage in hospitals should not be longer than 6m and should drop down in stack pipes. 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. innovations ventilation), as it ventilated directly from the back of the trap. Air and hot water always rise, which is why ventilation pipes are always vertical. In modern systems that do not have trap ventilation or anti-syphonic pipes, the air in the effluent from the fixture is first forced downwards and horizontally, up to the stack pipe connection, and then the air escapes upwards through the ventilation pipe and out into the atmosphere. The ‘old’ system was better in that the air went directly up through the anti-syphonic pipes and out to the atmosphere, and therefore carried the foul, contaminated air out of the building. I believe that the full trap-vent system is a solution for the contamination problem in hospitals. These ventilation pipes must also be fitted with a positive electro-mechanical air extraction device so that when the plumber opens a pipe, foul, contaminated air cannot escape into the room where the piping is situated. A competent hospital services design engineer should be able to design a system in such a way that when the pipes are serviced, the foul air cannot contaminate the hospital environment. However, the architect also plays a major role in designing the building to cater for service areas such as ducts and creating spaces where the hospital environment cannot be polluted. The trend with new hospitals is to minimise on space required for ducts and even plant rooms to save on costs. The ‘old’ hospitals had ‘dirty’ corridors and spaces where the ‘dirty’ services were conducted, which allowed for maintenance and services without entering sterile areas. Perhaps we need to relook at how this was done? The design and position of the sluice room should also be considered and provided with an exhaust system for sanitary drainage to prevent www.waterafrica.co.za Water Sewage & Effluent January/February 2019 15