Rainwater Harvesting for Indian Buildings — Design Guide

Rainwater Harvesting for Indian Buildings — Design Guide

Rainwater harvesting (RWH) is mandatory for new constructions above specified plot sizes in most Indian states, and is a prerequisite for IGBC, LEED, and GRIHA green building ratings. Beyond compliance, a well-designed RWH system significantly reduces municipal water dependence and groundwater withdrawal. This guide covers collection, filtration, storage, and recharge system design for Indian commercial and residential projects.

1. RWH Regulations Across Indian States

State / City

RWH Mandatory For

Authority

Tamil Nadu

All buildings with plot >300 m²

TWAD / ULB

Karnataka (Bangalore)

All buildings with plot >2400 m²; 30 m+ height

BWSSB / BDA

Delhi

All buildings with plot >100 m²

DJB / MCD

Maharashtra (Mumbai, Pune)

Plots >300 m² or floor area >500 m²

MCGM / PMC

Gujarat

All buildings with plot >300 m²

GWSSB / ULB

Rajasthan

All buildings with plot >500 m²

PHED / ULB

Telangana

All buildings with plot >300 m²

HMWSSB

West Bengal

All buildings >15m height

KMC / state

2. RWH System Components

Component

Function

Key Specification

Catchment area (roof)

Collects rainfall

Impervious roof = 0.85–0.95 runoff coefficient

Gutters and downpipes

Convey water from roof

GI / UPVC — sized for peak intensity

First flush diverter

Discards first 1–2mm of rainfall (removes contamination)

Capacity: 15–25 L per 100 m² of catchment

Pre-filter (mesh + gravel)

Removes coarse debris

100 micron mesh + gravel bed

Storage tank

Stores harvested water

HDPE / RCC / GRP — sized for dry season demand

Pump and distribution

Supplies stored water to use points

As per demand — toilet flushing, garden irrigation

Groundwater recharge pit

Recharges aquifer — mandatory in many states

Perforated casing + gravel backfill — minimum 3m deep

3. Sizing — Rooftop Catchment and Storage

Step 1 — Annual Harvestable Volume

V_annual = A × R × C

Where: A = roof catchment area (m²), R = annual rainfall (m), C = runoff coefficient (0.8–0.9 for impervious roof)

Step 2 — Storage Tank Sizing

Storage should cover the demand during the dry period between rainfall events. For Indian cities:

City

Annual Rainfall (mm)

Distinct Dry Season

Recommended Storage (days supply)

Mumbai

2400 mm

Nov–May (6 months)

15–30 days

Delhi

780 mm

Oct–Jun (9 months)

30–60 days

Bangalore

900 mm

Dec–Feb + Jun–Jul

20–30 days

Chennai

1400 mm

Mar–Sep

30–45 days

Kolkata

1600 mm

Nov–Apr

20–30 days

Hyderabad

810 mm

Oct–May

30–45 days

Ahmedabad

780 mm

Oct–Jun

45–60 days

Pune

700 mm

Oct–May

30–45 days

Worked Example — IT Park, Bangalore, 5000 m² Roof

Parameter

Value

Roof catchment area

5000 m²

Annual rainfall (Bangalore)

900 mm = 0.9 m

Runoff coefficient

0.85

Annual harvestable volume

5000 × 0.9 × 0.85 = 3825 m³

Toilet flushing demand

500 persons × 20 L/day = 10,000 L/day = 10 m³/day

Irrigation demand

2000 m² landscaping × 5 L/m²/day = 10 m³/day

Total daily demand

20 m³/day

Required storage (20 days)

400 m³

Selected storage tank

2 × 200 m³ RCC underground tanks

RWH self-sufficiency

3825 / (20 × 365) = 52% of annual demand from RWH

4. Water Quality and Treatment

Use

Treatment Required

Notes

Toilet flushing

First flush diverter + settling

No chlorination needed — not potable

Cooling tower makeup

First flush + 100 micron filter + chlorination

Legionella risk — must treat

Garden irrigation

First flush + settling

Minimal treatment needed

Car washing

First flush + settling + 50 micron filter

Potable use (emergency)

Full treatment: settle + filter + UV + chlorine

Not recommended as primary potable supply

5. Groundwater Recharge Systems

In states and cities where direct aquifer recharge is mandated, the RWH system includes recharge structures:

  • Recharge pit: 1m diameter × 3–6m deep — perforated casing surrounded by gravel filter
  • Recharge trench: for large plots — 0.6m wide × 2m deep trench filled with gravel, covered with filter media
  • Recharge well (borewell): deep aquifer recharge — requires hydrogeological assessment
  • Capacity: 1 recharge pit per 100 m² of catchment area — multiple pits for large buildings
  • Overflow: recharge pit must have overflow to stormwater drain — prevents flooding

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