. FIXTURE BRANCHES are horizontal drainpipes
connecting several fixtures to the stack.
. A FIXTURE DRAIN extends from the P-trap
of a fixture to the junction of that drain with
any other drainpipe.
. SOIL AND WASTE FIXTURE BRANCHES
feed into a vertical pipe, referred
to
as a stack. If the waste carried by the fixture branch
includes human waste (coming from water closets
or from a fixture with similar functions), the
stack is called a SOIL STACK. If a stack carries
waste that does not include human waste, it
is referred to as a WASTE STACK. These stacks
service all the fixture branches beginning at
the top branch and go vertically to the building drain.
. A BUILDING DRAIN (also referred to as a
house drain) is the lowest piping part of the drainage
system. It receives the discharge from the
soil, waste, and other drainage pipes inside the
building and extends to a point 3 ft outside the
building wall. (Most local codes require that the
house drain extend at least 3 ft beyond the building
wall, but a few local requirements range from
2 to 10 ft.)
. A BUILDING SEWER is that part of the horizontal
piping of a drainage system that extends
from the end of the building drain. It conveys the waste to the community sewer
or an independent disposal unit.
. A FLOOR DRAIN is a receptacle used to receive water to be drained from
the floors into the drainage
system. Floor drains are usually located near the heating equipment and in the
vicinity of the laundry equipment or any
unit subject to overflow or leakage.
. A CLEANOUT is a unit with a removable plate
or plug that provides access into plumbing or
other drainage pipes for cleaning out extraneous
material.