Group 5_Kaira Looro Women's House Project

Page 27

1.4.4

Wastewater Treatment

By Yuzki Wang

The women’s house toilet system (see section 1.4.5) is designed to protect and preserve the environment by collecting urine and faeces separately. This dry composting system allows sustainable operation of safe disposal on human excrement, wastewater management, ordo control and devotes human excreta for a productive purpose. The entire toilet structure is built above the earth with solid protection of concrete slab at the bottom of the infrastructure. Such construction can highly prevent potential groundwater and soil contamination towards the local community. The system consists of two disposing chambers. The first chamber is in operation for a year then the alternative chamber will be in use for the following year. In the second year, the stocked faces in the first chamber will become dehydrated and compostable. Once the hydration is completed, centre staff can open up the chamber and manually extract the dried human disposal. The clean pit will then be ready for the third year of operation. The alternative design allows a sufficient timeline for the dehydration process. It is crucial to ensure the dried faeces contain no to absolutely low pathogen content, to eliminate health risks when handling the excrement. According to studies, composite faeces is rich in versatile micro-organisms (Malkki, n.d) and constitute a substantial source of nutrients (Moya et al, 2019). Composite faces not only consist of important plant nutrients such as Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Potassium, it is also rich in organic matter in enhancing soil health (Moya et al, 2019). Therefore, the dried excrement will later be used as a soil conditioner in the vegetable garden. On the other hand, urine will be stored in urine tanks located outside of the toilet. Unlike wet faeces, urine poses a very little risk due to it being almost sterile and already consist of high nutrient content (World Health Organisation, 2018). Therefore, the Urine collected will later use directly for agriculture purposes as a liquid soil fertilizer. Figure 13 Dry compost toilet waste management plan

World Health Organisation, (2018).

ABPL2077 Humanitarian Construction 2021

27


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5.4 Waste Treatment

2min
pages 92-93

5.2 Vegetation

4min
pages 86-90

7.0 References

9min
pages 95-101

5.1 Food Security

4min
pages 84-85

5.0 Landscape Design Considerations

2min
page 83

4.2 Programme

2min
page 81

4.3 Cost Proposal

2min
page 82

4.1.5 Cistern Construction

1min
pages 79-80

3.4 Consequence of Design

0
page 64

3.1 Building Form and Function

0
pages 58-59

2.4 Conflict in Use

1min
page 51

2.5 Land Tenure, Women and Future Suggestions

5min
pages 52-54

2.2 Land Tenure Context and Arrangements

4min
pages 47-48

2.1 Site Location

0
page 46

2.3 Land Tenure Risks

4min
pages 49-50

2.0 Land Tenure Considerations

3min
page 45

1.4.6 Women’s Health Considerations

5min
pages 34-37

1.4.4 Wastewater Treatment

2min
pages 27-28

1.4.2 Water Treatment

4min
pages 22-24

1.3 Stakeholder Involvement

10min
pages 8-15

1.4 WASH

2min
pages 16-17

1.6 Gender Equality Priorities and Actions

8min
pages 41-44

1.4.1 Water Access

5min
pages 18-21

1.2 Community Engagement Plan

7min
pages 4-7
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