Scoomer
Civil/Environmental
- Nov 22, 2004
- 6
I would like to get an opinion from someone on roof drain leads. Here's the situation:
Got a building with a roof. Owner does not want to go with internal plumbing with the roof drains to my one stub to the building. The Owner has decided to go with external downspouts. However, I have to convey that roof water to a storm sewer system (very tight site).
So, I devised an external storm sewer system (HDPE piping and bends) with individual stubs to each downspout. From each underground stub I come up with two 45-degree bends and then bring a riser up to about 4 inches above grade right against the building wall. The downspouts empty directly into the risers and to the storm sewer system.
Question: What pipe material to use for the downspout riser in Minnesota climate? I have used DIP before, but what about HDPE? (I would like to keep the pipe materials the same without having to mess with couplings).
Or, if you have some completely different ideas, that's good too. Thanks!
Got a building with a roof. Owner does not want to go with internal plumbing with the roof drains to my one stub to the building. The Owner has decided to go with external downspouts. However, I have to convey that roof water to a storm sewer system (very tight site).
So, I devised an external storm sewer system (HDPE piping and bends) with individual stubs to each downspout. From each underground stub I come up with two 45-degree bends and then bring a riser up to about 4 inches above grade right against the building wall. The downspouts empty directly into the risers and to the storm sewer system.
Question: What pipe material to use for the downspout riser in Minnesota climate? I have used DIP before, but what about HDPE? (I would like to keep the pipe materials the same without having to mess with couplings).
Or, if you have some completely different ideas, that's good too. Thanks!