In the
summer of 2001, my wife and I were designing our house
with the goal of making it as green as possible. Naturally
that meant using sustainable building practices and
ensuring the house would be energy efficient, but we
wanted to go further and include the plumbing system
in our green design. Our local environmental health
department responded positively when we inquired about
the possibility of installing a composting toilet and
greywater system, so we began researching our options.
Choosing the toilet was relatively easy
(we went with the Phoenix R-200, www.compostingtoilet.com),
but we found a wide range of potential greywater system
designs. As with solar heating, greywater systems can
be either active or passive. The former rely on pumps
and filters, the latter on gravity. Active systems generally
are more expensive, require more maintenance, and are
more likely to be abandoned within a few years.
Our research led us to Oasis Design (www.oasisdesign.net)
and Art Ludwig, who has been designing greywater systems
since 1989. His three books, Create an Oasis with Greywater,
Branched Drain Greywater Systems, and Builder’s Greywater
Guide, provide a wealth of information. After weighing
the options, we decided that the branched-drain system
best combined the features we wanted and would allow
us to acquire a system permit.
This branched-drain system is an update
of the old “drain-out-back” greywater system. However,
instead of simply having the greywater exit the house
through a single pipe or hose, the branched-drain system
carries the water through buried pipes that branch several
times. A specially designed tee called a double ell,
which is curved to split the flow evenly without clogging,
accomplishes the branching.
In our system, the greywater exits the
house and then goes into one of two branching networks,
depending on which way the diverter valve is set. Having
two separate zones allows each one to recharge during
regular drying periods. In each zone, the greywater
splits three times on its way to the eight outlets.
At each successive junction, the water flow is halved,
so that the final outlets release one-eighth of the
total flow.
The outlets consist of five-gallon buckets,
each of which has the bottom cut out and many holes
drilled in the sides. Each bucket is buried in a mulch
basin, an excavated ring filled with mulch. The greywater
pipes enter the buckets, where the water falls at least
six inches to the gravel-covered bottom. From there,
the greywater penetrates into the mulch.
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The outlets consist of five-gallon
buckets, each of which has the bottom cut out and
many holes drilled in the sides. Each bucket is
buried in a mulch basin, an excavated ring filled
with mulch. The greywater pipes enter the buckets,
where the water falls at least six inches to the
gravel-covered bottom. From there, the greywater
penetrates into the mulch. |
At the center of each mulch basin is a
tree that will help soak up the water. We planted mayhaw
trees (crataegus aestivalis), which produce a crabapple-like
fruit, in the center of two basins, and cornelian cherry
trees (cornus mas), related to dogwood, in the other
two.
The system was relatively inexpensive
and easy to assemble. The only hardware in the system
is the diverter valve, pipes, joints, double ells and
five-gallon buckets. The only difficult parts of the
installation involved laying out the pipes so that they
sloped enough (1/4" per foot) to maintain flow and leveling
the double ells so that the flow would split evenly.
As I mentioned, our local environmental
health department was receptive to the idea of a greywater
system. Upon doing the research and deciding what kind
of system to install, we wrote a detailed proposal for
our permit application. In addition to system design,
we included information about our site, greywater load
estimates and surge capacity. The environmental health
director had worked at the state level on greywater
regulations, and he found our proposal to be adequate.
He issued a permit with one stipulation: he required
that we install a 500 gallon holding tank, so that he
could avoid having to send our proposal to the state
technical review board. Since we didn’t care to wait
months for another evaluation that might or might not
yield a favorable result, we agreed.
The story doesn’t end there, however.
The house took longer than we expected to build, so
we had to renew our permit after a year. Unfortunately,
the environmental health director had moved to another
county, and his replacement sent our proposal to the
state review board. The state thereupon rejected our
permit renewal, and we had to spend the following months
negotiating with environmental health officials at the
county, district and state levels. In the end, they
gave us a permit for an experimental system, and required
that we provide quarterly reports for the first three
years. The benefit of going through all this trouble
was that they let us build the system exactly as we
originally proposed it, without the 500 gallon tank.
(We preferred not to have the tank because anaerobic
processes turn standing greywater into blackwater in
about a day.) Although we had surmounted the permit
challenges, we feared that our home lender Fannie Mae,
would be unwilling to offer us a fair mortgage, given
our home’s atypical features. In this case, everything
fell right into place. Our banker asked Fannie Mae directly
about the composting toilet and greywater system and
was told that they were not a problem.
In five months of use, the greywater system
has performed admirably. As for maintenance, we have
only needed to switch the diverter valve every couple
of weeks. We also have to be vigilant about keeping
toxic chemicals out of the greywater plumbing system.
Overall, we’re happy with the choices we made and the
effect of those choices on the environment. We’re confident
and pleased that our greywater system and composting
toilet will not have a negative impact on surface and
ground water, like typical systems may.
About the author: Dr. Allison A. Bailes
III is currently on staff with Southface, view biography.
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