Feeling the pressure – the need for a reliable water supply at Rochdale Infirmary
The maintenance team at Rochdale Infirmary now have the reassurance of knowing they have a reliable, efficient and easy to maintain pressure booster installed.
- Client The Pennine Acute Hospitals NHS Trust
- Date27th October 2021
- CategoriesIndustry, Healthcare
- Project HeadMr. John Meckency
Project Overview
Elevated Engineering were asked by the maintenance team at Rochdale Infirmary, an NHS Acute General Hospital located in Rochdale, Greater Manchester, to look at an old Grundfos booster system. On inspection it became apparent that their aging and unreliable booster pump was threatening to disrupt the supply of potable water to their patients and staff.
The hospital had been relying on an old booster pump for the crucial delivery of potable water from a 70,000 litre tank to all outlets across the hospital, including taps and showers, and the reliability of said booster pump was becoming a significant cause for concern to the facilities team.
Most important and challenging facts about this project.
After a detailed investigation, which included a site survey with our pump supply partner Dutypoint, we proposed a solution that involved replacing all the working components of the existing booster pump with high quality, durable, easily serviceable replacements, and in order to reduce cost, disruption and the risk of any potential loss of supply, all existing pipework and manifolds were retained.
- Initial Site Survey
- Replaced booster pump compnents
- Retention of existing pipework and manifolds
How we solved issues and successfully complete the project.
The work undertaken on the Rochdale Infirmary booster pump project included the original fault diagnosis, and designing, building and installing a fully WRAS approved system that would deliver the required pressure at all times. This included the provision of an expansion vessel for efficiency at times of low demand and designing in the capability to deliver the required flow at peak demand times, i.e., when multiple taps and showers could be used at the same time.
Further features of the enhanced booster system include a purpose-built control panel with pressure sensing capability for better fault indication, inverter controlled pumps for improved efficiency, and compatibility with the hospital’s existing BMS.
- Build and installation of WRAS approved system
- Expansion vessel provsion
- Purpose built control panel with pressure sensing capability
- Inverter controlled pumps