This document provides information about water demand points in West Yorkshire, including a table listing 5 demand points by number, name, type, and notes. It also includes two figures: Figure 1 shows the main demand point locations, and Figure 2 highlights the local network area to be designed, which will be supplied from demand point 2 and should consider minimum pressure, redundancy, and ease of installation.
This document provides information about water demand points in West Yorkshire, including a table listing 5 demand points by number, name, type, and notes. It also includes two figures: Figure 1 shows the main demand point locations, and Figure 2 highlights the local network area to be designed, which will be supplied from demand point 2 and should consider minimum pressure, redundancy, and ease of installation.
This document provides information about water demand points in West Yorkshire, including a table listing 5 demand points by number, name, type, and notes. It also includes two figures: Figure 1 shows the main demand point locations, and Figure 2 highlights the local network area to be designed, which will be supplied from demand point 2 and should consider minimum pressure, redundancy, and ease of installation.
Demand Point Number Name Type Notes on Map 1 Todmorden Residential 2 Hebden Bridge Residential 3 Mytholmroyd Residential 4 Keelham Heights Farm Residential 4 houses 5 Cragg Vale Industrial Park Industrial
See Figure 1 for main demand point locations.
2 Local Area Network
Design a local network to supply the houses in the shaded area of Figure 2. This is the detailed design of the final pipe work which will take the water (almost) to the users themselves. Your local area network will be supplied from main demand point 2 of the wider network you have already designed. Please consider the following: 1) This local network is only part of what is supplied by main demand point 2. The total flow into your local network will not necessarily match the total demand at this main demand point. 2) There must be at least one local demand point (i.e. junction in EPANet) for every 10 houses. The demand set for these junctions must be appropriate for the number of houses they serve. 3) Minimum supply pressure must be as in your design requirements. 4) Where reasonable, redundancy should be taken into account – what happens to the rest of your network if a pipe gets damaged? 5) For ease of installation and maintenance, pipes generally don’t go under buildings 3 Map
Figure 1 Main Demand Points and Reservoir Location