Posts regarding ‘Plumbing’

Humanure: Goodbye, Toilets. Hello, Extreme Composting

December 12th, 2009 by brinker
(From Time Magazine)
By Adam Fisher Friday, Dec. 04, 2009

David Bailey helped install a composting toilet in Austin. Sawdust is used to eliminate odor.

For more than a decade, 57-year-old roofer and writer Joseph Jenkins has been advocating that we flush our toilets down the drain and put a bucket in the bathroom instead. When a bucket in one of his five bathrooms is full, he empties it in the compost pile in his backyard in rural Pennsylvania. Eventually he takes the resulting soil and spreads it over his vegetable garden as fertilizer.

“It’s an alternative sanitation system,” says Jenkins, “where there is no waste.” His 255-page Humanure Handbook: A Guide to Composting Human Manure is in its third edition and has been translated into five languages, but it has only recently begun to catch on. His message? Human manure, when properly managed, is odorless. His audience? Ecologically committed city dwellers who are looking to do more for the earth than just sort their trash or ride a bike to work. (See reusable toilet wipes as one of the top 10 odd environmental ideas.)

“It’s one of those life-changing books,” says Erik Knutzen, 44, an eco-blogger in Los Angeles. “You read it, and the lightbulb just goes on.” Now he eschews his porcelain potty for a big bucket with a toilet seat. He “flushes” by tossing in a scoop of sawdust, which not only neutralizes smells but also helps speed the breakdown of material for compost. Like many back-to-basics sophisticates, he believes Jenkins’ humanure system is more sanitary and more rational than the conventional alternative. “Human waste is a perfectly good source of an important resource, nitrogen,” Knutzen observes. “Water is a valuable resource too. Why mix the two and turn all of it into a problem?”

Wastewater treatment is much more energy-intensive than composting, which needs little more than time (about a year) for complete decomposition and pathogen elimination. In Austin, Texas, a sustainably minded nonprofit called the Rhizome Collective succeeded this year in getting the city to approve what may be the first legal composting toilet in the U.S. “The hypocrisy is amazing,” says Lauren Ross, 54, a civil engineer involved in Rhizome’s four-year battle to get a permit. “The city will buy you a low-flow toilet, but they’ll fight you all the way if you want to build one that uses no water at all.”

It’s an idea that you, dear reader, might be asked to take seriously. Not long ago, Nance Klehm, 44, a self-described radical ecologist in Chicago, invited her neighbors to stop using their toilets and start saving their poop. More than half of them — 22 of the 35 households — accepted her proposal. In three months she picked up 1,500 gal. (5,700 L) of excrement, which she’ll give back to participants this spring after she and Mother Nature have transformed it into a rich bag of fertilizer. “I’ve sent a sample in for a coliform test,” Klehm says. “There is zero detectable fecal bacteria.” (Read a brief history of toilets.)

At one point, Klehm invited her “nutrient loopers” to a potluck and was surprised to see who had agreed to participate. “It was the white collar people, not the ragtag anarchists. Mostly, they were delighted that they got this wacky proposal,” she says. “They didn’t know how to connect with the earth, but they could s___ in a bucket.”

Meanwhile, over in California, the Marin Composting Portable Odorless Outhouse Project, a.k.a. MCPOOP, is doing Klehm one better. The goal of MCPOOP (which is pronounced the Irish way as opposed to the rap-star way) is to get the government into the night-soil business and put humanure toilets in county parks and town squares. The group is less than a month old but already has the support of the local environmental establishment and Marin County supervisor Steve Kinsey. “The whole thing is like a good acid flashback,” says Kinsey. “We approved several experimental permits like this in the ’70s.” He estimates that a small-scale municipal demonstration project could be under way in less than a year. (Read “Is It Time to Kill Off the Flush Toilet?”)

MCPOOP was founded by a couple in their 50s. “We’re on a mission to re–potty train America!” says John Wick, a rancher in the western part of the county. “We’re going to start by replacing those nasty blue loos,” says his wife Peggy Rathmann, referring to two chemical toilets on their town’s main square. If that goes over well, they’ll replace the chemical toilets around Tomales Bay that kayakers often use. And then, who knows? Wick and Rathmann don’t see why every home in Marin County shouldn’t be humanure equipped.

To Joe (Mr. Humanure) Jenkins, nothing could be better news. “On a small scale, my system works like a dream,” he says. “But in order to do more research and development, I need to to collect humanure on a larger scale.”

MCPOOP and other projects are eager to help on the supply side. “We’re going to have plenty,” predicts Rathmann. “Tons of tourists come to West Marin, and they all leave us their poop!”

This is an expanded version of an article that originally appeared in the Dec. 14, 2009, issue of TIME

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Underslab Plumbing

September 29th, 2009 by snugganut

Today the underslab plumbing was completed.

Click here to view the entire Nauhaus Prototype Construction Chronology.

Ground Loop, Sewer, Greywater Lines

Ground Loop, Sewer and Greywater Lines

Plumbing in Mechanical Room

Washer, Tub Drain, Vent, Wastewater Heat Exchanger Stub-outs in Mechanical Room

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EcoDrain Wastewater Heat Exchanger

June 23rd, 2009 by Seldom

We have received City approval to install vertical GFX heat exchangers like the Power-pipe. They will recover 50% of the heat in the hot water used for a shower. The only problem is that they are 5 or 6 feet tall (there are shorter ones but they aren’t very efficient), and they have to be installed vertically. That means we can’t recover heat from a shower located on grade without pumping the drain water.

Today, my horizontal wastewater heat exchanger prayers seem to have been answered. EcoDrain claims their 30″ long horizontal heat exchanger will recover up to 40% of the energy in a shower. My first thought was “well, that’s going to clog immediately,” but EcoDrain thinks I should relax:

The contact area of the horizontal EcoDrain drain is coated with a very slippery environmentally friendly non-stick coating. This prevents anything from sticking to the device and makes it self cleaning. For further assurance, it is possible to purchase a hair cover for the drain which dramatically reduces the amount of hair that ends up in the drain.

A 4″ diameter vertical GFX heat exchanger can be installed on the main gray water drain leaving a house to recover heat from all showers, the washing machine, and dishwasher, but the EcoDrain is sized for a single shower at a time:

A single EcoDrain can be used for multiple showers provided the showers are rarely used simultaneously. There is a limit to the maximum flow on the supply side and also an optimal flow on the drain side. If multiple showers drain at the same time, there will be diminishing returns in terms of savings because the heat exchanger capacity may be exceeded resulting in some water just passing through the heat exchanger without transferring any heat.

That’s fine with me. Our clients should be washing clothes with cold water anyway, and the dishwasher doesn’t use a lot of hot water. The clothes washer and dishwasher are also non-coincident loads. They fill with hot water. They do their thing, and they drain later. You wouldn’t be recovering heat unless you happened to be running some water while one of them was draining. Showers are what we need to recover every time. The other fixtures are good to pick up if it’s not any trouble.

The horizontal EcoDrain fits in a box 30” long by 6” high by 2” wide. It is designed to fit between a p-trap and a main drain line under the floor of the shower.

The vertical EcoDrain is a tube of diameter 3” and length 30”.

Pressure drop is about 5 psi.

The larger GFX heat exchangers are probably the way to go if we have a basement because they’re more efficient, but EcoDrain will come in handy when we have a shower located in the basement.

EcoDrain.ca

:: Inhabitat

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Daily Water Use

April 10th, 2009 by Seldom

Good Magazine has a good graphic showing relative water use of daily activities. This is just a corner of it. Click to view the whole thing

water-use

Avoiding meat saves a LOT more water than a low flow shower head or toilet.

Growing corn requires a lot of water too:

A gallon of ethanol, depending on irrigation practices, might require up to 2,100 gallons of water to produce. While, in areas more suited to corn production, it can take as little as 100 gallons of water to produce a gallon of ethanol. The worst news of all of this, is that from 2005 to 2008 water use for ethanol production increased 246%, whereas U.S. bioethanol production has increased only 133%. This means that corn ethanol production has pushed into land that is not well-suited for growing corn, thus increasing water use far more than it increased yield.

Ecogeek

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The System of Command

March 19th, 2009 by hana

The Greywater Powers That Be (or Be Not)

Red arrows indicate referral to another node of Greywater Power.

In our effort to design one of the first Passivhaus-certified residences in the country at “JJJ Ranch,” we are taking the same approach that we integrate into all of our high-performance natural building residential projects. In accordance with this holistic systems-design approach, we would like to incorporate a greywater system for landscape irrigation, in order to decrease potable water consumption for landscaping use, to improve the landscape and onsite food production quality, and to decrease the load on the sewer system.  At the outset of this research into the waste water policy of our State, we were already aware that the North Carolina 2006 Plumbing Code was the current code enacted at the state and county levels, and that this code defined greywater to be “waste water discharged from lavatories, bathtubs, showers, clothes washers and laundry sinks,” and that gray water was only to be used for flushing lavatories (not for irrigation). 2006 North Carolina Plumbing Code, Appendix C101

Our investigation into the existing code pertaining to a residential greywater system began by contacting the Buncombe County Permits and Inspection office. Our contact at this office sent us the 2009 Plumbing Code, in which there is detailed a greywater system for irrigation, much like an onsite septic field. When we inquired about the soil testing and approvals required within the code, this contact referred us to a Program Specialist at the Buncombe County Environmental Health Department, whose approval was necessary before a building permit could be approved. The Program Specialist informed us that a greywater irrigation system must be approved by the State Onsite Waste Water Department (under the NC Department of Environment and Natural Resources, DENR), and that OSWW would not approve such designs because waste water code does not distinguish between “black” and “grey” water—all must be hooked up to an approved septic system or field.

We then redirected our investigation to the state level and contacted the Plumbing Code Consultant under the NC Department of Insurance. This contact informed us that the design must be approved by DENR, and that they would most likely not approve it (again because Environmental codes do not distinguish between “black” and “grey” water). So, we contacted an Onsite Waste Water official under DENR. (Our email was intermediately redirected to a general Public Information Specialist at DENR, who referred us back to the Plumbing Code Consultant with whom we had spoken at the NC Department of Insurance.) The OSWW official that we had contacted informed us that we could either get approval through the OSWW Innovative & Experimental Systems Committee (under DENR) or through the Environmental Health Department, starting at the county level. The contact at I&E predicted that the design would not be approved, since the OSWW code does not recognize “grey” and “black” water separately, so we went back to the county level.

As we had already spoken to a Program Specialist at the Buncombe County Environmental Health Department, we contacted the Environmental Health Director, who after consulting with a Buncombe County Soils Specialist, informed us that the county is already approving the system described in the 2009 Plumbing Code, since any current building project would be finished after the code is to be enacted this coming summer.

So…it’s legal…?

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How Much Does a Shower Cost?

March 18th, 2009 by Seldom

A shower’s cost varies with water use, the cost of the water, inlet water temperature, the amount of energy used to heat the water, the cost of that energy, shower temperature, and sewer costs.

Imagine two neighbors. Each has a supply water temperature of 50°F, combined water/sewer charges of 0.28¢/gallon, electric rates of 8¢/ kWh, and gas rates of 60¢/therm. However, one has a low-flow showerhead on a water heater, and one has an old showerhead on an electric water heater. They both take 105°F showers, but because of the different water heaters and showerheads, the cost per minute of their showers differs by a factor of seven.

The neighbor with a low-flow showerhead rated at 2.5 gallons per minute (gpm) and a gas water heater with an Energy Factor (EF) of 0.6 can shower for just 1.6¢ per minute–0.9¢ for gas and 0.7¢ for water. The other neighbor, with an old 8 gpm showerhead and an electric water heater with an EF of 0.92, will pay almost 11¢ per minute for the shower–8.5¢ for electricity plus 2.2¢ for water.

During the time they run water to heat it up, they will both pay more per minute, since they will probably run all-hot water at a higher flow rate, perhaps running it at full blast through the tub spigot.

:: Home Energy Magazine

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The System of Command

March 10th, 2009 by hana

The Greywater Powers That Be (or Be Not)

Red arrows indicate referral to another node of Greywater Power.

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Permaflow P-Trap

February 26th, 2009 by Seldom

$45 vs about $5 for a standard PVC P-trap.

PF Waterworks

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Four Steps to a More Efficient Shower

February 19th, 2009 by Seldom

This Instructables article has some good info:

  1. Enclose the stall.
  2. Install a foot pedal controller
  3. Add a check valve to make sure the hot water and cold water don’t backfeed when the flow to the head is off.
  4. Shower head (Recommendations).

Instructables | Cozy Low Energy Shower

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Roof Materials for Rainwater Harvesting

February 7th, 2009 by Seldom

Texas Rainwater Harvesting Manual:

For potable systems, a plain galvanized
roof or a metal roof with epoxy or latex
paint is recommended. Composite or
asphalt shingles are not advisable, as
toxic components can be leached out by
rainwater. See Chapter 2 for more
information on roofing material.

On the other hand, this research makes me question galvanized because of metals in the water: Link

The Texas Manual also has costs starting on page 50.

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