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Floor drain in garage?

Ross/Kzoo

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Oct 22, 2013
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2,191
Location
Richland Mi.
We're building a new home and garage and something came up this morning. I was going to put a floor drain in the garage and then have a lead from the floor drain to the outside. I told the excavator of my plan and he rolled his eyes and said "floor drain in the garage?". He indicated that it either wasn't done or was illegal. Any thoughts?
 
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Farmall450

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Dec 23, 2011
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Marengo, Illinois
I know my parents had the exact same problem back in '99...not sure why?
IMO the water is gonna get in the ground one way or another.
 

Stuart in MN

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Sep 8, 2005
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Location
Minneapolis
If you can put one in, and how it's drained, will depend on local regulations so check with your building department. Pay no attention to those people who tell you how they do it where they live. The big concern is that oil or gas will go down the drain and get into the ground.
 

LB-1911

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Sep 24, 2011
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Location
Northwestern Il.
We're building a new home and garage and something came up this morning. I was going to put a floor drain in the garage and then have a lead from the floor drain to the outside. I told the excavator of my plan and he rolled his eyes and said "floor drain in the garage?". He indicated that it either wasn't done or was illegal. Any thoughts?

My thought is to check with the Authority Having Jurisdiction.

Previous discussions
https://www.google.com/#q=new+const...++++garage+journal+site:www.garagejournal.com
 

ratdoggy

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Mar 27, 2009
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11,977
Location
Akron-Canton area OH
If you can put one in, and how it's drained, will depend on local regulations so check with your building department. Pay no attention to those people who tell you how they do it where they live. The big concern is that oil or gas will go down the drain and get into the ground.

Very common where I live (snow slush) drained to a creek behind my house. House was built in 2009
 

unsinkable

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Feb 23, 2014
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57
Location
New England
illegal now in most (if not all) states.
The thought being, that people would allow oil and other hazardous materials to be poured down the drain.
Even though the idiots that would do that are going to "wash" it away anyway.

Some people have attempted to cover the installed drain with building materials until after the final inspection...most inspectors are hip to this trick, best way is to skimcoat over, then chip away after all the lookyloos are gone (wonder how I know this ?!)
Good Luck !
 

Jsf721

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Joined
Dec 23, 2012
Messages
4,129
Location
LI, NY
I put a 3000 gallon French drain / dry well under my driveway to make sure no rain water would ever get into the house. There is poor soil in my area, loads of clay and the water does not readily absorb into the ground.

At the same time I though, who not FRP board the garage walls and make a wash station?

Asked contractor to channel into garage and install a series of "strip drains", and tie them into the dry well.

He laughed at me. I though it was because I wanted to wash the car in the garage. He said, they will never approve that, ever. He was right. Has to do with polluting ground water.
 

kelpaso1

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Sep 28, 2009
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Location
New Brunswick
illegal now in most (if not all) states.
The thought being, that people would allow oil and other hazardous materials to be poured down the drain.
Even though the idiots that would do that are going to "wash" it away anyway.

Some people have attempted to cover the installed drain with building materials until after the final inspection...most inspectors are hip to this trick, best way is to skimcoat over, then chip away after all the lookyloos are gone (wonder how I know this ?!)
Good Luck !

This is what my neighbor did. He installed the drain pipe and drain in the floor before the concrete pad was poured. He built a 2x4 frame around the drain and put a piece of plywood over top about an inch below what the final pad depth would be. After the finished garage was inspected he chipped away the concrete, removed the plywood, and put a steel grate over the drain:evil:
 

Rlastr

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Sep 28, 2014
Messages
127
I added floor drains and tied them into my septic, no problem with codes here.

image.jpg
 

G_P

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Jul 11, 2010
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Location
Central CT
Most places are concerned that people will use the floor drains as places to dump used oil or that if a gas tank is leaking there will be 15+ gallons of gas going down the drain.

I have heard of people being allowed to do it as long as they install an interceptor in the line to catch any oil residue and keep it out of the sewer/septic.
 

kelpaso1

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New Brunswick
Most places are concerned that people will use the floor drains as places to dump used oil or that if a gas tank is leaking there will be 15+ gallons of gas going down the drain.

I have heard of people being allowed to do it as long as they install an interceptor in the line to catch any oil residue and keep it out of the sewer/septic.

:shocking:Just cant fix stupid sometimes.
 
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sickjuice

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Jun 12, 2012
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welfare provence
I have nothing to back my claim up, but I'm willing to bet every jurisdiction allows them... IF your willing to go to the extent of installing an oil interceptor.
 

xyster101

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Jul 3, 2013
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640
Location
Upstate NY
I installed one here in upstate NY. Goes to daylight. I just asked the inspector before hand expecting a big NO!. But got a yes, so just ask.
 

maynard9089

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May 17, 2014
Messages
77
I have 2 in my garage that was built in 2010 also in Upstate NY. Mine drain to a ditch. The only no-no here is running it to your home sewer lines. The oil and waste arguement is bunk. Dirtballs that dump oil like that will do it regardless. My drains are about 8" deeper than the drain line exiting them. About 2x a year I pop the covers and hit them with the Shop-Vac.
 

NUTTSGT

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Sep 14, 2009
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Northern Central Ohio
I'd guess most places found it's easy to not allow them than to worry about the hassles that may evolve from a spill. Stormwater (rain/melting snow) needs to be separated from the sanitary sewer per EPA regulations.

If the drain goes to daylight, the inspector (jursidiction having authority) needs not worry about it contaminating sewers. Guys in Canada will have different rules than the US.
 

Acuratechva

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Mar 4, 2013
Messages
438
Location
Virginia Beach VA
We're building a new home and garage and something came up this morning. I was going to put a floor drain in the garage and then have a lead from the floor drain to the outside. I told the excavator of my plan and he rolled his eyes and said "floor drain in the garage?". He indicated that it either wasn't done or was illegal. Any thoughts?

Sounds like hes just lazy or lacks knowledge
 
OP
R

Ross/Kzoo

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Oct 22, 2013
Messages
2,191
Location
Richland Mi.
The excavator has nothing to do with the installation. He was just passing on his experience. I will contact the permiting agency on Mon. and let the GJ'ers know the outcome.
 

6768rogues

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Nov 28, 2007
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Western NY
I would ask the inspector. If he says it is not permitted, ask for the section of the code that disallows it and look it up yourself. It is not unheard of for an inspector to make a mistake. If it is truly disallowed, maybe there is some loophole you can use but you have to read the code yourself.
 

jimp

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Nov 20, 2010
Messages
561
Location
oo
No problem with a floor drains, all you have to do is collect ALL of the discharge and have it treated as hazardous waste. Local code and inspector, eastern Kansas.
 

vetron

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Joined
Sep 4, 2013
Messages
74
Location
Idaho
I wanted a drain in my shop that just drained under the shop. builder said no way they could do that. had to do with codes, regs, rules, blah blah blah
 
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