GoldDredger
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 16, 2008
- 172
I have a new project for a school that will build a 2,000 seat arena at an existing campus. The arena will generate 310 Fixture Units, or about 0.25 cfs during peak use.
The sanitary tie in will be a private 4" lateral, currenty serving a maintenance building and baseball concession stand (low use). After having the lateral exposed and shot for location and elevation, I calculated it is 900-feet at 0.1% slope to the tie in public manhole.
The mannings capacity for the pipe is a quarter of expected peak flow, at about 0.06 cfs.
The question for me is do I just design 900 feet of new bipass line down an existing road, or propose a connection to the undersized (and old) line.
For the second option, I would propose a new sanitary manhole. Flows above existing downstream capacity could surcharge the manhole temporarily until catching up.
Normally I wouldn't consider anything but a new bypass line, however the arena's peak use will be limited to a few times a year at best (basketball games).
Any opinions?
The sanitary tie in will be a private 4" lateral, currenty serving a maintenance building and baseball concession stand (low use). After having the lateral exposed and shot for location and elevation, I calculated it is 900-feet at 0.1% slope to the tie in public manhole.
The mannings capacity for the pipe is a quarter of expected peak flow, at about 0.06 cfs.
The question for me is do I just design 900 feet of new bipass line down an existing road, or propose a connection to the undersized (and old) line.
For the second option, I would propose a new sanitary manhole. Flows above existing downstream capacity could surcharge the manhole temporarily until catching up.
Normally I wouldn't consider anything but a new bypass line, however the arena's peak use will be limited to a few times a year at best (basketball games).
Any opinions?