ᐅ Water supply line for backflow replenishment and irrigation

Created on: 31 Aug 2022 15:41
D
DASI90
Hello everyone,

We have decided to install a pool and want an automatic water refill system as well. This means we need water supply in our outdoor storage area, where the pool equipment and irrigation control will be located. Of course, we didn’t consider this during planning and construction, as the desire for a pool and automatic irrigation came much later. Anyway.

The outdoor storage is part of the house but is outside the thermal envelope and has no direct access from the house. Now the question is how to get the water connection into the outdoor storage. We would definitely install a backflow preventer. There are basically two options:

1) The pool installer suggested running an additional cold water line from the utility room on the opposite side of the house into the outdoor storage. We could tap off from there. However, this would require a core drill through the concrete wall and insulation, which I would prefer to avoid. The pool installer says this would pose no problem if the drill hole is properly foamed/sealed afterwards. So neither thermal nor sound insulation should be affected, especially since the outdoor storage already has a door and is otherwise tight.

2) I’ve only recently considered this option. We already have a frost-free outdoor faucet at the front. Would it theoretically be possible to modify this faucet or run a line from it through the garden and the front, uninsulated wall of the outdoor storage to supply the equipment? Or is this not advisable or feasible for some reason? The missing outdoor faucet could potentially be replaced by a water outlet if this works out.

Technical floor plan: Outdoor storage, utility room, cold water line, pool equipment; frost-free outdoor faucet.


What do the experts say? Is the solution with the additional line harmless and cleaner? Or am I risking creating a hole that wouldn’t be necessary otherwise?

Best regards
DASI9013 Oct 2022 14:28
Ok 🙂. Thanks for the tip. I’ll take another look.

For the drip line, I would prefer to keep it underground in the flower beds or along hedges. From your practical experience, do you see it the same way?
rick201813 Oct 2022 14:39
I would install a weed barrier fabric. Whether to use irrigation above ground or underground is a matter of preference.
With Rainbird XFS, both options are possible.
DASI9013 Oct 2022 14:45
Yes, exactly. Rainbird XFS is planned. The point about the weed barrier fabric is a good one. I hadn’t thought of that yet.
DASI9013 Oct 2022 15:16
Just to clarify. If I have the lawn area, a solitary tree, and two flower beds of very different sizes, should I choose a total of 4 zones with 4 valves to be able to control them separately? Or is it better to have fewer zones if it is possible performance-wise?
rick201813 Oct 2022 16:55
4 zones allow for more precise watering/control.
Sprinklers, drip irrigation, and bubblers should never be combined in the same zone.
DASI9014 Oct 2022 13:55
Thank you. That’s how I’ve decided to do it now, and everything has been ordered.

Unfortunately, we still have to figure out how to get the electrical cable to the pool. The electrician rejected the current cable today. It’s not powerful enough. It would have been great to know back when the shell of the house was built that we wanted to install a pool...

Now we have to find a way to get another cable somehow. In the utility room, we have two core drillings for the inlet and outlet of the brine for the heat pump. These are sealed with a circular sealing collar. Is it possible to use a different circular sealing collar with a second compartment to run a high-voltage cable through it? Or is that completely unrealistic?