Commercial Scale Greywater Systems

Laundromat greywater system in Chula Vista. Image credit ReWater.com

Laundromat greywater system in Chula Vista. Image credit ReWater.com

Apartments, businesses, schools, and other situations with more water, more people, and more public exposure to the greywater will require a more complex and sophisticated system for reuse. These systems typically collect greywater in a large temporary tank, filter and disinfect it, and then pump it back to either flush toilets, or supply a drip irrigation system for the landscape.

There are many examples of platinum LEED buildings incorporating rainwater to flush toilets, and this system is refered to as a “greywater system.” Technically this is not greywater, rather is is a rainwater harvesting system to flush toilets. There is lack of consistency with terminology in these commercial scale situations.

At the commercial scale, it is often easier and more cost effective to treat all the building’s waste water – greywater and blackwater – for reuse rather than separating out the greywater. This is especially true if the building is already constructed because the waste water is combined. In the United States, buildings such as the Solaris building in New York treat all the water on-site and then reuse it for toilet flushing. A membrane bioreactor (MBR) system is used to treat, store and reuse the waste water for toilet flushing, irrigation, and cooling systems. This reduces the fresh water taken from the city’s water supply by over 75% and decreases energy costs associated with pumping.

sfpuc-living-machine-cells-exteriorLiving machines are another system used to treat combined waste water for reuse. The San Francisco Public Utilities Commission’s headquarters in downtown SF uses a living machine to treat all wastewater in the building- on site. The building consumes 60% less water than similarly sized building. Treated wastewater is used for toilet and urinal flushing.

Companies like Orenco Systems make on-site waterwater treatement systems, the water can be reused for non-potable needs.

Industrial scale systems that treat water from clusters of buildings can include small waste water treatment plants, often incorporating wetlands and plants growing in greenhouses to treat the water for local reuse. Systems like Organica’s greenhouse industrial park treatment plant in Shenzhen, China, treat water so it can be reused for toilet flushing or irrigation.

Examples of greywater used in commercial building for toilet flushing:

Designers and Installers of Commercial Scale Systems

  • Rewater (CA)
  • Water Sprout (CA)
  • Hyphea Design Lab (CA)
  • Wahaso
  • Conservation Technology
  • 2020 Engineering (WA)
  • Sierra Watershed Progressive (CA)