There are no sewers in rural areas, so how can you deal with bathrooms and toilets if you build a ne

Updated on Bathroom 2024-08-30
5 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    You still design the sewer indoors as you build a building, but you dig a septic tank outside your building, and collect the wastewater to fertilize.

  2. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    Now most of the domestic water and bathing water are separated, and double sewer pipes are arranged. One discharges the washing and bathing water into the field or ditch, and the other discharges the toilet water into the thatched pit, and sets up a sedimentation tank to clean it up periodically.

  3. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    Dig a 5-meter-deep seepage well in the ground, build it with bricks around it, use cement powder, and connect the toilet sewer pipe directly to the seepage well.

  4. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    He laid a pipe underground to divert the sewage to the outside of the village.

  5. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    We can't flush toilets in rural areas, and other waste water is flowing down the road!

Related questions
4 answers2024-08-30

Toilets in rural areas are still relatively clean, so why? >>>More

4 answers2024-08-30

Non-restroom locations cannot be converted into restrooms.

2 answers2024-08-30

Dig a cellar under the bathroom and leave an exit outside. The deeper you dig, the better.

5 answers2024-08-30

In rural areas, they generally dig their own toilets and pour them into their own fields, so will no one use such a good farm fertilizer?