The condition and plan of the sewage system is of major concern bearing in mind the large population in the city. The city’s sewage system is designed to collect both storm water runoff and waste water into a main pipe system. The Department of City Planning has ensured zoning in housing for the New York City community. Controlled construction of houses is of great importance for the structuring of an organized city (Peterson 2). Among the benefit that accrue from housing zoning is an orderly and clean sewage system.
The New York City’s sewage system is well organized as houses are built in a prescribed order. The planning of the city has made it ease in laying the drainage system. Each day, dirty water tinkles down toilets and drains in homes factories and schools then flow in the city’s sewer system through pipes. Water runoff from rain, sidewalk washing and other outdoor activities is directed to catch basins strategically positioned on the streets and from there it flows into the sewers then to the treatment plants.
Industrial and sanitary wastewater is usually transported in a combined sewer system to the treatment plants in the city. The city residents, therefore, display a reasonable degree of hygiene. However, the sewage system in the suburbs is pathetic (Smith 20). People’s household and industries are connected to the main sewage system by way of piping. The main system contains one central pipe that delivers the sewer to the treatment plants within the city before disposing it to the waterways. The city’s management has put in place mechanisms, which ensure that any sewer that does not find its way to the main system is properly disposed.
The sewage system is structured in such a manner that the contaminated influent water passes through a treatment system for cleansing before it is disposed to city’s main drainage
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