Construction
Whether your project is a house, small building, roadway or land development, you can have a big impact on future water consumption by including conservation at every stage of your project.
Areas to focus on to improve water efficiency:
-
The design phase
Make your project more water efficient in a cost effective way by incorporating water saving principles from the very beginning.
- Prepare a Water Efficiency Management Plan (WEMP) for your project that includes actions during construction, appliances and plumbing to be installed, re-use potential, landscaping and rainwater utilisation.
- Ensure that water conservation and the protection of water quality is included in all tender and contractual documentation.
- Stay up-to-date with the latest opportunities for water conservation design and appliances.
- If you are designing a greenfield site, try to use natural draining swales instead of costly concrete drainage pipes. Install drainage systems that allow the polluted ‘first flush’ to be diverted into trade waste and the clean water that follows to flow into tanks, pond systems or drainage swales.
-
Planning
- Establish water conservation as a key objective of the project and ensure that everyone involved in the project is aware of their responsibilities.
- Provide induction training for new employees and contractors so that they are also aware of their responsibilities and the benefits of the program.
- Keep the water management plan on-site and ensure that all employees are aware and have access to it.
- Discuss water management at regular meetings.
- Keep track of ongoing achievements.
- Promote your successes with press releases to local media and industry associations.
-
On-site
- Reduce evaporation by retaining as much vegetation as possible during construction.
- Install water efficient irrigation systems.
- Have workers use a broom rather than a hose to clean paths and gutters.
- Use buckets of water to clean tools instead of running water.
- Don’t hose paths, driveways, concrete and other paved areas except when cleaning with water is necessary for construction activity, surface discolouration, or for safety, health or emergency reasons. These should be readily identifiable to an authorised officer. Examples of when you may hose a path, driveway, concrete and other paved surface during construction include:
- Preparing a surface for painting or resealing.
- Cleaning surfaces before selling or leasing a property.
- Rinsing surfaces after construction activity provided that the area is initially cleaned using a shovel and broom.
Remember all handheld hoses must have a trigger nozzle.
-
Protecting water quality
- Minimise disturbance of waterways, flood plains, vegetation and soil.
- Plan your activities so nothing from your site, such as soil, sand and cement slurry, will go down the gutter or drain and directly pollute the stormwater system, local creeks and rivers.
- Ensure cement works are not carried out on roads or paths so you avoid needing to wash the slurry away with water.
- Fence the site with temporary fencing (hoarding) and line it with hay bales. Geotextile silt fencing can also be used.
- Install and maintain erosion and sediment control devices. These devices can reduce water velocities on-site by redirecting run-off at regular intervals with bales, contours, baffles and mounds or by retaining vegetation.
- Cover or filter stormwater inlets and drains.
- Regularly clean and maintain all stormwater protection devices.
- Avoid the use of building materials such as asbestos or PVC, that will pollute water.
- Stockpile and cover building materials away from drains or roads.
Top tips to save water
Water conservation can be incorporated at every stage of your construction project, from design, to planning and construction itself.
Smart Water Choices now apply
Find out what Smart Water Choices mean for your business, how to prepare your business' Water Efficiency Management Plan (WEMP) and frequently asked questions.