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Thread: Specs on House Plans
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8th May 2008, 11:06 AM #1Owner Builder
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- May 2007
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- Altona Vic
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Specs on House Plans
Hi, I have the following specification on my house drawings, which I can't even begin to decipher!
`Service Pipes to be located at a distance not closer than 45 degree incline from their invert level the base of the footing/slab, away from any proposed footings'
What on eath does this mean? And is it referring to plumbing service pipes or electrical service pipes?
Thanks,
Zac
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8th May 2008, 11:20 AM #2
It refers to all pipes.
From the edge of the building imagine a line going into the ground at 45 degrees.
The pipes must be outside that line.
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8th May 2008, 12:12 PM #3Owner Builder
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- May 2007
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- Altona Vic
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Thanks for the quick response Bob. What about my sewer waste pipe, which needs to go through one side of the footings and out the other side - are there any regulations about this? (I'm building an extensions out the back of my house with strip footings, not a slab).
Regards,
Zac
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8th May 2008, 12:15 PM #4
I don't think they'll allow the sewer pipe to run through the footing itself
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8th May 2008, 12:52 PM #5Owner Builder
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- May 2007
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- Altona Vic
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That's interesting... I would have thought that was unavoidable in most cases, even in a new dwelling, especially one with a slab, how could they have any waste pipes that don't exit the house area without passing through either a slab edge beam, a slab internal beam, or a strip footing?
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8th May 2008, 12:54 PM #6Owner Builder
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- May 2007
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- Altona Vic
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Maybe I should clarify - when I said my waste pipe needs to pass through the footings, I meant roughly at right angles or 45 degrees, ie only passing through the footings for about 40 or 50cm, you may have thought I meant it would be going right through the core of the footings for many metres in a parallel direction
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8th May 2008, 02:12 PM #7Senior Member
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- Feb 2006
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- vic
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the note is just there to ensure any service pipe excavations do not undermine the footings or the footings do not place any loading on the service pipes. Technically the 45 degrees should be taken from the bottom of service pipe trench to the bottom of the footing.
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8th May 2008, 03:46 PM #8Owner Builder
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- May 2007
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- Altona Vic
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I have drawn a quick diagram to show where the waste pipes are in relation to the strip footings for my house extension. Is it allowable for these pipes to pass through the new footings? The pipes are already there, so the plan would be to poor the concrete footings with the pipes in place.
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8th May 2008, 04:06 PM #9Senior Member
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- Feb 2006
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- vic
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yes thats fine just use some lagging or expansion foam aroung the pipes, if you have any spare trench mesh put it around those areas.
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8th May 2008, 04:20 PM #10Owner Builder
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- May 2007
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- Altona Vic
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- 66
Ah, that's good news, I was getting worried there for a minute. So even that pipe on the right side which goes through the footings at an angle will be okay?
BTW thanks again for your generous assistance I don't know where I'd be without this forum
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8th May 2008, 07:33 PM #11Senior Member
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- Jul 2007
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- Sydney-south
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A sewer pipe that passes through a footing must do so at an angle no less than 45deg, so anywhere betwwen the right angle and 45deg, to make provision for this (this is only if the internal drainage is to be done after the footings are poured) I usually put a piece of 6" pipe through the footing which will give room for your 4" drain to pass through with ease, if you were to put a piece of 4" in and try to join on either side chances are it will get knocked out of place during the pour, concreters arent typically gentle on pipes, and it gets worse if they use a pump and start dragging around a vibrator!
But if the internal drainage is done first be sure to wrap it HEAVILY in expansion joint foam, and while they pour it wouldnt hurt to have either yourself or even your plumber there to keep an eye on the pipe as it will float as the concrete goes in.
As for the distance from footings for your trench Ive dug up a diagram for you to look at,Plumbers were around long before Jesus was a carpenter
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