
Stopping basements from becoming ponds: Drainage of buildings in heavy rainfall events
In the German Harz region at the end of July 2017: The low “Alfred” brings many days of torrential rainfall, locally exceeding 300 litres per square metre. The consequences: Many rivers are in spate, flooding parts of the towns of Goslar, Wernigerode and Clausthal-Zellerfeld and causing millions of euros in damage.
In the Alps-Adria area at the end of October 2018: An extreme low pressure zone led to extreme storms and heavy rainfall in Austria, Switzerland, Italy and other countries. Some regions experienced more than 600 l/m2 of rain within a few days. Tornadoes caused enormous damage. In the Austrian province of Carinthia a civil defence alarm was sounded, and in Italy alone damage added up to more than 3 billion euros.
In the German Harz region at the end of July 2017: The low “Alfred” brings many days of torrential rainfall, locally exceeding 300 litres per square metre. The consequences: Many rivers are in spate, flooding parts of the towns of Goslar, Wernigerode and Clausthal-Zellerfeld and causing millions of euros in damage.
In the Alps-Adria area at the end of October 2018: An extreme low pressure zone led to extreme storms and heavy rainfall in Austria, Switzerland, Italy and other countries. Some regions experienced more than 600 l/m2 of rain within a few days. Tornadoes caused enormous damage. In the Austrian province of Carinthia a civil defence alarm was sounded, and in Italy alone damage added up to more than 3 billion euros.
Batting down the hatches is not enough: Water can also enter the building through backflow
In lower-level rooms water can enter the house via toilets or washbasins.
The problem of backflow: When stormwater shoots out of the basement toilet
Water as high as the flood level
When stormwater cannot flow off fast enough in the sewer, it rises up to the flood level. If no adequate protection is provided, it can spill out of lower-level discharge points.
Keeping your feet dry during torrential rain: Effective protection against backflow
- Anti-flooding devices
- Lifting units
The use of anti-flooding devices is limited
- When a natural gradient to the sewer is given, waste water containing faeces from rooms of subordinate use may be discharged via an anti-flooding device – provided that few people use the sanitary installations and an additional toilet is available above the flood level.
- In addition, faecal-free waste water may be discharged via an anti-flooding device when the connected installations (shower, washbasin, etc.) do not need to be used in the event of backflow.
The discharge points are located above the flood level –protection is not required.
The discharge points are located below the flood level – a simple swing check valve protects the basement against flooding when necessary. In this case, all sanitary appliances below the flood level can no longer be used.
Lifting units: the only truly reliable backflow protection
The discharge points in the basement are below the flood level but still above the sewer. With the loop above the flood level, no water can enter the house through the discharge points.
The discharge points in the basement are below the sewer. This is where a lifting unit is a must as waste water occurring below the sewer has to be lifted above the flood level to be able to flow off into the sewer system.
Dry basement, also during heavy rainfall: Summary and conclusions
Used products
MiniCompacta
Floodable single-pump sewage lifting unit or dual-pump sewage lifting unit for automatic disposal of domestic waste water and faeces in building sections below the flood level.
Compacta
Floodable single-pump sewage lifting unit or dual-pump sewage lifting unit for automatic disposal of waste water and faeces in buildings and building sections below the flood level.