Saving water – Completehome https://www.completehome.com.au Turn your house into a home... Mon, 25 Sep 2023 05:46:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.3.2 https://da28rauy2a860.cloudfront.net/completehome/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/24103109/complete-home-favicon.jpg Saving water – Completehome https://www.completehome.com.au 32 32 Build Your Own Tank: Customise Your Water Solution https://www.completehome.com.au/outdoors/build-your-own-tank-customize-your-water-solution.html Thu, 14 Sep 2023 06:44:25 +0000 https://www.completehome.com.au/?p=76524 When it comes to ensuring a steady supply of clean water, having a reliable water tank is essential.…

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When it comes to ensuring a steady supply of clean water, having a reliable water tank is essential. Whether you’re a homeowner looking to harvest rainwater, a business owner seeking to optimise water management, or a farmer in need of irrigation solutions, having a custom-made water tank can make all the difference. And now, with Kingspan’s 3D Water Tank Builder, you have the power to design your own tank, tailored to your specific needs.

The 3D Water Tank Builder

Kingspan, a trusted name in water management solutions, has introduced an innovative tool that empowers you to create your own water tank – the 3D Water Tank Builder. This free online platform allows you to customise a water tank to your precise specifications, ensuring it meets your unique requirements.

How Does It Work?

Using the 3D Water Tank Builder is a straightforward process:

  1. Design Your Tank: Click on the provided link here to access the builder. Begin by designing your tank. You can select the tank size, shape, and additional features that suit your needs.
  2. Save Your Design: Once you’re satisfied with your tank design, click on the ‘Save Design’ button. This action will not only allow you to email yourself a copy of your tank design but also initiate the quoting process.
  3. Get a Comprehensive Quote: Kingspan’s friendly tank advisor will send you a comprehensive quote based on your design. This quote will provide you with a clear understanding of the cost of your custom tank.
  4. Consultation with Kingspan: If you have any questions or require further advice, you can discuss your design with a Kingspan team member. They can provide insights into the tank’s suitability for your specific needs, ensuring you make an informed decision.
  5. Order Your Designed Tank: If you’re confident in your design and ready to proceed, you can add the tank to your cart and complete the checkout process right away. This seamless approach streamlines the ordering process and ensures you get the tank you envisioned.

water tank builder

Benefits of Customisation

Designing your water tank offers several advantages:

  1. Tailored to Your Needs: Customisation allows you to create a tank that precisely matches your requirements, ensuring efficient water storage and management.
  2. Optimized Space: Customisation allows you to maximise space utilisation, fitting the tank seamlessly into your property or project.
  3. Enhanced Functionality: You can incorporate features such as filtration systems, pumps, and outlets to make your tank even more functional

Ready to Take Control of Your Water Supply?

With Kingspan’s 3D Water Tank Builder, you have the freedom to design the water tank that fits your needs like a glove. Whether you’re an urban homeowner, a business owner, or an agricultural enthusiast, this tool puts you in charge of your water supply destiny. So why wait? Visit the 3D Water Tank Builder today and start creating the perfect water storage solution for your needs.

For more information, 

Kingspan Water Tanks 

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Expert advice: Saving water at home https://www.completehome.com.au/new-homes/expert-advice-saving-water-at-home.html Thu, 23 May 2013 00:00:00 +0000 Designer and sustainability expert Ian Cleland shares his thoughts on various methods of saving water at home.

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Designer and sustainability expert Ian Cleland shares his thoughts on various methods of saving water at home.

1.   GRAF underground water tank

2.   Reed bed newly installed for a single household blackwater system

3.    Coast & Country Tanks 3000-litre in Colorbond Pale Eucalypt

The human body is about two-thirds water, the brain itself up to 85 per cent water. So H2O is indeed a necessity for staying alive.

In Australia, water consumption per capita has been falling; it’s currently at 920 kilolitres per capita per year. This figure is for all consumption, including agriculture, industry and individuals. At an individual level in Australia, it varies state to state from 170 litres to 200 litres per day.

In Australia, we see it as a right to have clean water. Yet 884 million people globally don’t have clean water to drink and 99 per cent of deaths worldwide are due to water-borne diseases.

To many of us who live in the city, having access to clean water is something we take for granted. If you live in a rural area, though, you will have a greater appreciation of the scarcity of water if you have to provide your own catchment and storage for your water needs.

Until recently, it was illegal to have storage for your own water supply in the city and even now it’s deemed not appropriate for drinking water. This seems strange, given that all those rural people are dependent on tank water for all their needs, including drinking water.

Then there’s the issue of recycling waste water. Generally, this is carried out by centralised sewerage treatment plants that clean the water to a point where it can be delivered back into a river system or an ocean outfall.

For most of us, then, the processes of supplying clean water and disposing of waste water are not our responsibility. It’s a case of out of sight, out of mind.

 

The other side of the equation

As mentioned, many rural people have to provide their own solutions for capture and storage of clean water and disposal/recycling of waste water.

The situation is now starting to change in our cities, however, as people want to secure some of their own water supply, be it by capturing rain from the roofs of their homes or, to a lesser extent, by recycling grey water, which is generally all waste water except that from toilets — known as black water.

Black water is disposed of into the centrally controlled sewerage system, or into an on-site sewerage system where connections to a centrally controlled system are not available.

So what are our options for water storage and ways to recycle grey water in our own backyards?

 

Water capture

If we are to supply clean, safe water to our own homes we must be able to remove the pollutants deposited on our roofs that come down with the first rains that fall. Most of these pollutants, such as dirt build-up and leaf litter, can be removed by a first-flush device. This has to be supplemented with further filtration on entry to the tank to stop leaf litter and small animals being washed live or dead into the water tank. As a final precaution, you could provide an additional filter on the outlet if the water is going to be used for drinking.

Personally, I would rather not go down the path of adding chemicals to water. Even though it is an option, it requires somebody who is qualified to maintain the system. Even then, the quality of the water must be checked on a regular basis for peace of mind.

There are numerous storage systems that vary in size and types of material used in their construction. You also need to consider whether your storage tank will be located above or below ground.

In cities, because of restrictions on block sizes, there may be limitations on how much water you can store. If you are building a new home or adding an extension, you could use the space under your slab for a modular storage tank. These can be used for water capture and recycled storm or grey water.

 

Water recycling

One thing we can all do before we start determining whether we should recycle water is look at ways to conserve water, whether by installing devices that reduce water pressure, choosing appliances and fittings that are more water-efficient, taking shorter showers or creating water-wise landscaping and growing drought-tolerant plants.

As a rule, water utilities won’t approve the recycling of black water, so grey water from bathrooms, laundries and kitchens will be all that can be recycled. When recycling grey water, you will also need to consider the solvents and detergents you use and be careful not to flush into the system any fats, oils, paints, bleach or other inorganic materials, as they will affect the processing of the grey water.

If you would like to create a water feature that also treats your grey water, you can construct a reed bed. This will do the job of a natural wetland and should work very successfully. A reed bed can be designed and sized to suit the inflow from the grey-water system. Like swimming pools, these systems can be maintained by an external contractor.

A safe, reliable water source, whether supplied or recycled, is important in all our lives. Water is a scarce resource in a country such as Australia — the driest inhabited continent on Earth.

 

Images:

1. GRAF underground water tank. Standard sized are 2500 litres to 6500 litres — distributed in Australia by Reece Plumbing, reece.com.au

2. Reed bed newly installed for a single household blackwater system at Bullaburra Blue Mountains by Root Zone Australia, rootzone.com.au

3. Coast & Country Tanks 3000-litre in Colorbond Pale Eucalypt, coastandcountrywatertanks.com.au

By Ian Cleland
From Grand Designs Australia magazine Vol. 2 No. 2

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