1 Plumbing Definition
1 Plumbing Definition
1 Plumbing Definition
maintaining sanitary conditions in building used by humans. It is also defined as the art and science of installing, repairing and servicing the pipes, fixtures and appurtenances necessary for bringing in water supply and removing liquid and water-borne wastes; the art and science of installing in buildings the pipes, fixtures and other appurtenances for bringing in the water supply and removing liquid and waterborne wastes. It includes the fixtures and fixture traps; the soil and waste pipes; vent pipes; the building drain and building sewer; and the storm drainage pipes; with their devices, appurtenances and connections to all within or adjacent to the building.
PLUMBING
Historical Background
Since the dawn of civilization plumbing and sanitation
has been part of human lives. All human beings, regardless of culture and race had been practicing the act of disposing waste since time immemorial. Historians, in their attempt to trace the history of plumbing, events which had brought about changes that led towards the plumbing system that we know today, had painstakingly devised records of chronological events.
Historical Background
The first artifact to have been unearthed was a
copper pipe used in a water system in the ancient palace ruins in the Indus Valley. It was estimated to be 5,500 years old. Such discovery established the earliest known knowledge on plumbing systems. Around 2,500 BC, the Egyptians used copper pipes in their irrigation and sewerage systems. In the ancient Babylon, the science of hydraulics had been established as evidenced by their skillful planning in their network of canals. The inhabitants of Crete to collect water for drinking, washing, bathing and cooking purposes, constructed freshwater cisterns.
Historical Background
During the Roman Empire (500BC - 455AD), enormous concerns on
the field of sanitation and plumbing had been observed those times. Aqueducts were built to convey water from sources to houses. Extensive underground sewer systems were constructed. Notable among these developments is the construction of underground public water supply system made of cast lead sections. Public baths had proliferated; one particular example is the Bath of Diocletian, a bath that could accommodate 3,200 bathers at one time. These baths were lines with ceramic tiles. In addition. Roman bathhouses also include large public latrines, sometimes with marble seats. The quality of plumbing declined after the fall of the Roman Empire in AD.. 476. During the middle ages, people disposed of waste materials by throwing them into the streets. !n 1500's, a type of water closet was developed. Septic tanks were introduced in the mid-1800's, and a modern sewerage system began operating in London in the 1860's.
Roman Aqueducts
supply distributing pipes; the fixture and fixture traps; the soil, waste and vent pipes; the building drain and building sewer; the storm water drainage, with their devices, appurtenances and connections within the building and outside the building within the property line.
Drainage System
All the piping within a public or private
premises which conveys sewage, rainwater or other liquid wastes to a point of disposal. A drainage system does not include the mains of public sewer systems or a private or a public sewage treatment or disposal plant.
system are installed by the plumber to remove wastewater and water-borne wastes from the plumbing fixtures and appliances, and to provide circulation of air within the drainage piping.
Ventilation System
A system of pipes, fittings and other
devices installed for the purpose of providing circulation of air and creating balanced atmospheric condition within the system thereby preventing siphonage and backpressure.
Soil Pipe
A pipe that conveys the discharge of water
closets or similar fixtures containing fecal matter, with or without the discharge of other fixtures to the building drain or building sewer.
Waste Pipe
A pipe that conveys only liquid waste free
of fecal matter. A waste pipe is generally smaller than a soil pipe because of the nature of matter being discharged into the system. A waste pipe may be connected directly or indirectly depending on the type of fixture.