Piped Water Project
How
Will the Intervention Help?
- Most homes have
no easy access to water requiring 1-3 hours per day of
carrying water up and down mountainsides from distant
sources
- Significant
time and calories are expended getting water. This reduces
the nutrition of women and children that carry water and
takes away precious time from a mother's day that could be
better spent caring for her children
- When possible,
piped water is one of the lowest cost methods to bring
water to area homes. Depending on the distance from the
water source to the home and the number of homes served, it
is possible to provide piped water for a cost of $250 -
$500 per home.
What
is involved with a piped water project?
The most
important requirement is finding either a naturally occurring
water source (spring) or drilling a well. The water source
must be higher in elevation than the homes to receive the
piped water. Given the mountainous terrain and the cost of
well drilling ($5,000 - $10,000 per attempt) in the San Jose
area, we are only using naturally occurring springs that are
above homes needing water and that can deliver an adequate
amount of water, even during the dry season.
- The water from
the natural spring must be able to be captured by building
a small dam around the source.
- A
holding/distribution tank is built near the water source.
Most area natural springs only produce a few gallons a
minute, so the distribution tank allows collection and
storage of water even when people do not need water. Then
when people need water, there is an adequate supply for
their immediate needs.
- A short section
of pipe is installed between the natural spring and the
water tank. When possible, PVC pipe is used and buried in a
hand-dug trench.
- A combination
of PVC and galvanized steel pipes are used to carry the
water from the distribution tank to individual homes. When
the terrain allows the digging of a trench, PVC pipe of
various sizes is used. In areas where there is only rock or
when crossing a ravine, galvanized steel pipe is used (very
expensive). When crossing wide ravines, a suspension bridge
type structure is built using barbed wire (low cost) for
the supporting cables.
- Given the huge
elevation differences often existing between the water
source and homes, pressure release valves often have to be
installed or the pipes will explode.
- At each home,
one garden-type faucet is installed.
- Due to limited
water production by local springs, water used is closely
managed by a water committee created by each village.
During the dry season when water production is down, some
homes have to use less than 50 gallons/day.
Required
Materials
- PVC pipe, glue,
connectors, valves, etc.
- Galvanized
steel pipe, teflon tape, connectors, valves,
etc
- Ferro-cement
tank
- Faucets
Building
Process
- Complicated and
beyond the scope of this article
Total
Monetary Cost
- Total cost
depends on distance from source to tank, tank to home,
diameter of pipe, number of homes served and the distance
between homes, type of pipe – PVC vs galvanized steel, etc.
For San Jose, current projects have varied in price from
$250 - $600 per home.
Prior to the
piped water project, carrying 40-60 lbs of water up
mountainsides was a 2-3 time-a-day chore.
Carrying pipes
down the mountainside for the Calera water project
Water pipe
crossing a ravine on part of its 9 Km course
The first faucet
in la Calera and the realization that this girl will not have
to haul water twice a day anymore.