UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Adrian Brentnall
 
Posts: n/a
Default Soil stack venting - building regs ...?

Hi All
Wonder if anybody out there is familiar with the building regs
requirements re venting of soil pipes ?

I'm trying to get a completion certificate from our local council's
Building Control bods. One of their queries concerns the drains...

We have two drainpipes from our bungalow - both of which end up in our
own septic tank.
The main run connects to two WCs, 2 baths and various sinks. It looks
as if this was, at one time, vented through the roof via a 4" pipe
from inside the bathroom. This pipe has been removed, and an a
air-admitance valve has been fitted at floor level.

The other drain runs under the floor of the garage, and only carries
waste from the washing machine and a single stainless kitchen sink.
These waste pipes enter the drain via a short 4" stack with aav -
inside the garage.

The Building Control chappie has queried the second drain (he doesn't
know about the original one) - and would like to see it vented to
outside - requiring that the vent be 900mm above any opening window -
or more than 3m away from any opening window.

Because of the way the bungalow is laid out - this will look pretty
awful - but is do-able.

So - a couple of possible solutions - I'm wondering which of them meet
the Requirements....

Option 1 - Vent the second soil stack in 4" pipe through the back wall
of the garage and up the gable end of the new extension to the
bungalow - won't look very pretty.....g

Option 2 - As (1) - but run the 4" pipe back along the rear of the
garage flat roof so it ends up more than 3m from opening windows and
terminate the vent at garage roof level

Option 3 - Leave the venting as is in the garage - but reintroduce a
vertical vent pipe in the bathroom.
Could this terminate in the loft space with an AAV - or must this go
through the roof ?
Also - does the air vent need to be 4" - or can it be in a smaller
pipe (like basin / bath waste pipe ?) - as this would be much easier
to accomodate in the bathroom.

Before anybody says 'ask the Building Control people' - they're
desperately short-staffed at the moment and catching up wth somebody
to answer questions is a heck of a job - and I'm hoping that somebody
here might have been round this one before...

Thanks
Adrian - Suffolk UK
======return email munged=================
take out the papers and the trash to reply
  #3   Report Post  
Adrian Brentnall
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Hi Andrew

Thanks for the comments - see below .....

On 27 Sep 2005 22:27:07 GMT, (Andrew
Gabriel) wrote:

In article ,
Adrian Brentnall adrian-the papers and the
writes:
So - a couple of possible solutions - I'm wondering which of them meet
the Requirements....

Option 1 - Vent the second soil stack in 4" pipe through the back wall
of the garage and up the gable end of the new extension to the
bungalow - won't look very pretty.....g

Option 2 - As (1) - but run the 4" pipe back along the rear of the
garage flat roof so it ends up more than 3m from opening windows and
terminate the vent at garage roof level

Option 3 - Leave the venting as is in the garage - but reintroduce a
vertical vent pipe in the bathroom.
Could this terminate in the loft space with an AAV - or must this go
through the roof ?
Also - does the air vent need to be 4" - or can it be in a smaller
pipe (like basin / bath waste pipe ?) - as this would be much easier
to accomodate in the bathroom.


I believe you can vent a stack with an AAV in the loft, but not
in a habitable room (don't know about a garage).


My 'gut reaction' says that a garage isn't a 'habitable room' - but
that's only common sense - noting to do with Building Control g

The stack can
be reduced in size for the portion which forms only the vent,
but this is so rarely done you might have to find the relevant
regs to point it out to the BCO. I found it for a friend having
an extension built, but their BCO had never seen it before.


Yes - I had an extensive Google yesterday and the 'dry' part of the
vent (above the highest basin overflow) can be reduced to 3". This
would help a bit - but I'm still going to have to do a fair bit of
bulky boxing in in the alcove where the basin is fitted - bother !

I believe I read it that the top end of the stack can be in the loft,
with an AAV fitted - but I'll double-check.....

I guess I'd better come clean with the BCO about the odd arrangements
in the bathroom, and get him to approve the changes there at the same
time as agreeing what's to be done in the garage - rather than do part
of it and then have them fail the job on the other part.

To make it more exciting g - they're also insisting that part of the
underside of the garage roof, where the garage adjoins a recent
extension to the house, is skinned in Supalux or Masterboard - but
only for a section of the roof (width as yet unspecified).
The alternative to this is replacing 12ft x 4 ft of double-glazing
with wired or fire-resistant glass - somehow I think that's going to
be the more expensive option !

Wish I'd got the Building Cert 4 years ago while I was still doing the
work !

Thanks for your comments - much appreciated
Adrian
======return email munged=================
take out the papers and the trash to reply
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
joining into soil stack Martin Carroll UK diy 3 September 26th 05 03:56 PM
Building regs question. Ben Willcox UK diy 3 August 30th 05 01:50 PM
Windsor Plywood Scam - Saskatoon James \(Garry\) Hunter Woodworking 19 January 4th 05 04:12 PM
Taking out a wall and building regs... Adam UK diy 8 August 21st 03 10:39 PM
Saniflow : Coupling copper pipe to soil stack Flat Eric UK diy 0 August 18th 03 01:20 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:43 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"