M5.7: Your Sewage Facilities

San Francisco has three sewage facilities:

  • North Point Wet-Weather Facility: built in 1951, active only during wet weather, provides pretreatment and primary treatment with disinfection of wastewater from the northeast part of the City. Capacity is up to 150 MGD (million gallons per day). This system is outdated, with new improvements to infrastructure to come soon.
  • Oceanside Treatment Plant: built in 1993, receives up to 20% of the City's flow, treats water from the westside of the City. Capacity is up to 15 MGD, but during a rain stop, it can be up to 175 MGD. 
  • Southeast Treatment Plant: built in 1953, receives up to 80% of the City's flow, our largest wastewater facility. Responsible for the Bayside, Daly City, and Brisbane. Capacity is 60 MGD and up to 250 MGD during a rainstorm.  
These facilities combined serve over 800,000 customers and is operated by the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission (SFPUC). The facilities collect and treat both sewage and stormwater and discharge that water into the San Francisco Bay or Pacific Ocean.

Reference

https://sfwater.org/modules/showdocument.aspx?documentid=5801

Comments

  1. Its crazy to see that two of the three water facilities were built in the 50's. It makes you wonder what improvements have been made to the facilities since then and how water in the facilities has been treated throughout its existence.

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  2. I think that if they were built that long ago then they probably have failing infrastructures, which I believe is one of CA's main problems with water. They also have PVC pipes, which were banned in Europe due to their adverse health effects and chemicals leeching into the drinking water.

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