Waste water
The term ‘waste water’ (or wastewater) is sometimes used to refer to all water that has been used in homes, businesses, industry, agriculture and so on, as well as rain that falls on roofs, roads, and landscape, that then enters the sewerage system.
However, the term waste water is more accurately used to refer only to water that has been used in homes, businesses, industry, agriculture and so on, whilst water from rainfall is referred to as ‘surface water run-off’. NB The term or ‘sewage’ refers specifically to a mixture of waste water and excrement.
Sewers (or sewerage) refers to the infrastructure used to transport waste water to treatment facilities or to disposal points.
Types of sewer include:
- Sanitary sewers: Used solely for carrying sewage.
- Surface water sewers: Used solely to drain surface water run-off.
- Combined sewers: Used to carry both sewage and surface water run-off.
- Effluent sewers: Sometimes referred to as Septic Tank Effluent Drainage (STED) or Solids-Free Sewers (SFS)).
Combined sewers can cause pollution problems when heavy rainfall events cause them to overflow.
NB A drain is a pipe that serves only one building waste water to a sewer. A lateral drain is a section of drain positioned outside the boundary of a building, connecting with the drains from other buildings to become a sewer.
The treatment of waste water generally involves:
- Screening.
- Primary settlement.
- Sludge treatment and biological treatment.
- Final settlement.
- Return to watercourses (where it may be referred to as effluent, secondary effluent, or treated effluent).
Where properties are not connected to the sewerage infrastructure they may have septic tanks. These are tanks installed underground that separate waste water into solids and water that can be safely discharged into a septic drain field (seepage field or leach field). Material that does not break down naturally in septic tanks must be periodically removed and disposed of.
Rather than discharging directly into sewers, surface water run-off may be collected and stored. This can help reduce flooding during heavy rainfall events. Sustainable urban drainage systems (SuDS) aim to mimic 'natural' drainage by adopting techniques to deal with surface water run-off locally, through collection, storage, and cleaning before allowing it to be released slowly back into the environment.
Suitable surface water run-off (sometimes referred to as ‘grey water’ as it excludes sewage), such as run-off from the roofs of buildings, may be ‘reclaimed’ and treated to be re-used in WCs, urinals irrigation, washing machines and so on.
The terms black water, brown water, foul water, or sewage, refer to water that has come into contact with faecal matter or urine. Black water can be harmful to health and may contain bacteria, viruses, protozoa and parasites. Globally, most black water is discharged back into the environment without having been treated. This results in significant environmental damage and health problems.
NB The SuDS Manual (C753), published by CIRIA in 2015 defines wastewater as: 'Water used as part of a process that is not retained but discharged. This includes water from sinks, baths ,showers, WCs and water used in industrial and commercial processes.'
The Scottish Building Standards, Part I. Technical Handbook – Domestic, Appendix A Defined Terms, defines wastewater as: ‘…water that is contaminated by use and normally discharged from a watercloset, shower, bath, bidet, washbasin, sink, washing machine, floor gully and similar facility and also includes rainwater when discharging in a wastewater drainage system.’
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- Bidet.
- Biosolids.
- Blackwater.
- Clarified water.
- Difference between drains and sewers.
- Drainage.
- Drainage and sewerage management plans DSMPs.
- Drains.
- Foul water.
- Grease management.
- Greywater.
- Groundwater.
- Hot water.
- Integrated water management.
- Lateral drain.
- Mains water.
- Miasma theory.
- Public sewer.
- Sanitary pipework.
- Sewerage.
- Shower.
- Sink.
- Sludge.
- SO2 Scrubbers.
- Sustainable urban drainage systems SUDS.
- Types of water.
- Waste water treatment research in Alborz.
- Water quality.
- Water transfers and interconnections.
- Why innovation is needed in the water sector.
Featured articles and news
We're expanding our collaborative mission by launching DB Intelligence, an exclusive market research advisory panel. Built environment professionals can now get paid to share their expertise on industry trends, products and services.
Panel members receive direct financial incentives for participating in research projects like short surveys, 1-2-1 interviews and focus groups. Register today to shape the future of the construction sector.
Planning condition discharge in England and Wales
A brief exoplanation from a building compliance expert, with further links.
Overheating guidance and tools for building designers
Guidance for dealing with element of building fabric control that have increasing importance.
Shading for housing, a design guide
From the Good Homes Alliance and British Blind and Shutter Association.
UK Standard Skills Classification (SSC)
A shared framework for describing skills needs.
Social media ban consultation comes to close
CIOB urges UK Government to consider social media’s role in careers guidance in ban debate.
The latest of eight Skills England apprenticeship units
The addition of battery manufacturing welcomed by ECA with a warning about the risks of fast-tracked apprenticeship units.
Building Control Independent Panel final report
A precis of a key report led by Dame Hackitt with full recommendations and link to the government response.
Building Safety recap April, 2026
A short and longer run-through of the month, with links to further information and sources.
CIAT May 2026 briefing.
From medieval scribes to modern word art.
ECA welcomes crackdown on late payment and push for clean energy, whilst CIOB seek fixed cladding removal timeframes.
Cyber Security in the Built Environment
Protecting projects, data, and digital assets: A CIOB Academy TIS.
Managing competence in the built environment
ITFG publishes new industry guide on how to meet the ICC principles.
The UK's campaign to reduce noise pollution: Mythbusting, articles and topic guides.




















