lizzieuk1 Posted Thursday at 22:10 Posted Thursday at 22:10 We're prepping to dig foundation and drainage out and wondering about depths for the (approx 5m) run that is going to be under the insulated raft and how low to set the foot for the main stack which exits straight out. Any idea what that depth needs to be? Is it 600mm below the mot 1? Also, how far out from the edge of the raft do the drains need to run - I'm reading 1m min is the part H requirement if pipe is below foundation but, as our raft is only 450mm into the ground makes interpreting the regs a bit tricky as, pretty much any drain will be below the raft level. I'm not sure if it's interpreted the same as obv the weight is spread over the raft rather than down through strip foundations so, does this make a difference? Or, do I just ask BC?!
Nickfromwales Posted Thursday at 22:36 Posted Thursday at 22:36 On the current MBC project I'm consulting on, we have soil pipes in the 150mm MOT1 layer directly under the 50mm sand blinding, and some others like comms and landscape power are lower to avoid these. I designed all this ahead of MBC's arrival, making sure there were the least number of services crossing over/under each other. As you're under a raft, there is no minimum depth THB, but for power and water you do need to drop down towards the periphery to comply with the 750-900mm that these authorities will mandate.
Gone West Posted yesterday at 07:43 Posted yesterday at 07:43 @lizzieuk1 Our insulated raft sat on 250mm compacted type1 with 50mm granite fines on top. The insulation was 300mm thick. The inspection chamber was around 3m from the edge of the raft. The pictures show before and after sub-base was laid.
BotusBuild Posted yesterday at 10:51 Posted yesterday at 10:51 Our soil pipes are in the compacted type 803 and sand blinding. A 1m length close to one of the stack foots comes up about 20-30mm into the 250mm insulation.
lizzieuk1 Posted yesterday at 11:20 Author Posted yesterday at 11:20 12 hours ago, Nickfromwales said: On the current MBC project I'm consulting on, we have soil pipes in the 150mm MOT1 layer directly under the 50mm sand blinding, and some others like comms and landscape power are lower to avoid these. I designed all this ahead of MBC's arrival, making sure there were the least number of services crossing over/under each other. As you're under a raft, there is no minimum depth THB, but for power and water you do need to drop down towards the periphery to comply with the 750-900mm that these authorities will mandate. Many thanks Nick, that's really helpful. 👍
lizzieuk1 Posted yesterday at 11:22 Author Posted yesterday at 11:22 3 hours ago, Gone West said: @lizzieuk1 Our insulated raft sat on 250mm compacted type1 with 50mm granite fines on top. The insulation was 300mm thick. The inspection chamber was around 3m from the edge of the raft. The pictures show before and after sub-base was laid. Thankyou 😊 do you know if there's a reason the Chambers needed to be so far out? Or was it just 'on the way' to the mains connection?
lizzieuk1 Posted yesterday at 11:22 Author Posted yesterday at 11:22 30 minutes ago, BotusBuild said: Our soil pipes are in the compacted type 803 and sand blinding. A 1m length close to one of the stack foots comes up about 20-30mm into the 250mm insulation. Thanks 👍 sounds like we are OK to be in or just below the MOT then.
BotusBuild Posted yesterday at 11:24 Posted yesterday at 11:24 I think so, especially if @Nickfromwales has done something close to what I have described 😀 1
lizzieuk1 Posted yesterday at 11:26 Author Posted yesterday at 11:26 12 hours ago, Nickfromwales said: On the current MBC project I'm consulting on, we have soil pipes in the 150mm MOT1 layer directly under the 50mm sand blinding, and some others like comms and landscape power are lower to avoid these. I designed all this ahead of MBC's arrival, making sure there were the least number of services crossing over/under each other. As you're under a raft, there is no minimum depth THB, but for power and water you do need to drop down towards the periphery to comply with the 750-900mm that these authorities will mandate. Have you topped the pipe with pea grit then mot on top? Thinking in the 150 layer there's not much room for both!
Nickfromwales Posted yesterday at 11:37 Posted yesterday at 11:37 17 minutes ago, lizzieuk1 said: Have you topped the pipe with pea grit then mot on top? Thinking in the 150 layer there's not much room for both! Yes. Shingle goes under / around / atop, and then the sand blinding goes in. 17 minutes ago, lizzieuk1 said: Thinking in the 150 layer there's not much room for both! Groundworkers will just shoot through this, but if there's any major backfill over the shingle then they may well use a bit more type 1, then the sand (usually dependant on how far they have to walk to either pile of 'stuff' ). 21 minutes ago, lizzieuk1 said: Thankyou 😊 do you know if there's a reason the Chambers needed to be so far out? Or was it just 'on the way' to the mains connection? I've set this up so the chambers are dead centre of the hard standing (walkway) around the house. Seen way too many jobs where these are half in the slab and half into the grass etc, which looks shite. Have you allowed for all the requisite ducts / services etc?
Gone West Posted yesterday at 12:50 Posted yesterday at 12:50 1 hour ago, lizzieuk1 said: Thankyou 😊 do you know if there's a reason the Chambers needed to be so far out? Or was it just 'on the way' to the mains connection? I put it in the most convenient position on the way to the sewage treatment plant. I don't think there are any set distances. 1
Nickfromwales Posted yesterday at 17:56 Posted yesterday at 17:56 It’s just about when 2 pipes need to converge, where you’ll need IC’s at each instance or any time there’s a change in direction. You can run one pipe from A>B for some distance, but getting most BCO’s to agree to it is another thing. IIRC the last one wouldn’t let us go more than 8m (in a perfectly straight line)….. so ended up with 3 IC’s between the house and the road.
Gus Potter Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago 23 hours ago, lizzieuk1 said: Or, do I just ask BC?! Ask your SE, they should have detailed this out already for you. BC are not Structural Engineers. I might chip in as an SE but I would need to see the drawings first. There are lots of different types of raft. Until you know where the uniform loads are , where any point loads are you can't start on the drainage design.
lizzieuk1 Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago On 03/04/2026 at 12:37, Nickfromwales said: Yes. Shingle goes under / around / atop, and then the sand blinding goes in. Groundworkers will just shoot through this, but if there's any major backfill over the shingle then they may well use a bit more type 1, then the sand (usually dependant on how far they have to walk to either pile of 'stuff' ). I've set this up so the chambers are dead centre of the hard standing (walkway) around the house. Seen way too many jobs where these are half in the slab and half into the grass etc, which looks shite. Have you allowed for all the requisite ducts / services etc? 'Groundworkers' are me and OH! We also have a 'digger man' with plenty of experience but obv need to set out the runs etc for him. We've not got a sand blinding just peagravel for the insulation to sit on so may just fill with that above the pipe runs in the slab area. Good thinking re the IC positioning, as you say far better to get them centrally in the paving. Yes, have considered services, ours is actually quite straightforward, both water & electric coming into the utility just inside the outside wall and will be perpendicular to the drains so a simple cross over. I need to calculate the falls so I know what levels the drains are at to accommodate the water/electric incoming but nothing too complex.
lizzieuk1 Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago 18 hours ago, Nickfromwales said: It’s just about when 2 pipes need to converge, where you’ll need IC’s at each instance or any time there’s a change in direction. You can run one pipe from A>B for some distance, but getting most BCO’s to agree to it is another thing. IIRC the last one wouldn’t let us go more than 8m (in a perfectly straight line)….. so ended up with 3 IC’s between the house and the road. Yes, the architect has specified ICs on the regs drawings but he has one that is right in our paving under the portico which isn't ideal aesthetically. I cant understand why your bc wouldn't allow greater than 8m, isn't it far greater in part H, 22m or 45m?
lizzieuk1 Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago 15 hours ago, Gus Potter said: Ask your SE, they should have detailed this out already for you. BC are not Structural Engineers. I might chip in as an SE but I would need to see the drawings first. There are lots of different types of raft. Until you know where the uniform loads are , where any point loads are you can't start on the drainage design. I hear you Gus but I'm not sure a SE is necessary here, shouldn't really be any point loads in an insulated raft - obv the external walls & load bearing internal walls will have the most loading but by design that should be spread throughout the raft.
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