Greywater System Commissioning Case Study: Operator Handover Gotchas at 280-Key Bengaluru Hotel

Greywater systems are easy to design and hard to commission — and even harder to keep running through year 2 + 3 of operations. This case study walks through the handover audit at a 280-key luxury hotel in Bengaluru, the gotchas the operator’s engineering team flagged, and the operational SOP that finally stabilized treated-water quality.

The site

  • HSR Layout, Bengaluru — 280-key luxury hotel, branded international chain
  • Built 2022, occupied 2023
  • Greywater (GW) system: Tier 2 (sedimentation → multimedia filter → UV)
  • GW generation: 24,000 L/day from guestroom shower + basin drains
  • Non-potable reuse: flush (10,000 L/d), landscape (6,000 L/d), cooling tower make-up (5,500 L/d)
  • IGBC v3 WE-3 target: 2 points (75 % reuse)

The handover audit (operator engineering team)

3 weeks before operator handover, the operator’s central engineering team flagged 18 items. The 6 most material:

1 — No equalisation tank ahead of treatment train.

Original design relied on inline filter sizing for peak flow. Reality: GW arrives in 2-3 hour peaks (06:00-09:00 IST shower window). Inline filter at 1.5 m³/h capacity couldn’t handle 4 m³/h actual peak. Treated-water buffer ran dry by 09:30 daily.

Fix: retrofit 3,500 L equalisation tank with float-controlled inflow + level-controlled pump to filter. Capex ₹4.8 lakh, 2-week install.

2 — Multimedia filter media not specified to CPCB list.

Original spec was generic “sand + charcoal.” CPCB Empanelled Filter Manufacturer list mandates specific media gradings + activated-carbon residence times. Existing media was off-spec.

Fix: media replaced with CPCB-listed Aquatech NaviClean compound. ₹95,000 + half-day labour.

3 — No oxidant residual monitoring in treated tank.

Chlorine dosing was set at install (5 ppm) but no real-time monitoring. By 72 hours post-install, free chlorine was undetectable + bacterial regrowth was visible at faucet sampling.

Fix: ORP sensor + auto-dose pump on treated tank. ₹2.4 lakh including chemical handling.

4 — UV lamp age not logged.

UV reactor was operating 18 weeks at install. Effective UV-C output at 18 weeks: ~88 % of new. By 12 months it would drop to ~75 % (NSF 55 Class B threshold ~70 %). No replacement schedule.

Fix: lamp replaced at handover (only 18 weeks old but operator policy = replace at handover for known starting point). 12-month replacement schedule added to AMC.

5 — Pipe colour-coding incomplete.

CPCB + NBC require lavender pipes (GW), pale blue (treated water), white (potable). Three plumbing zones had inherited generic black pipe + improvised stencilling. Compliance fail; operator FM team refused handover.

Fix: repaint + restencil per CPCB Manual 2021 Annex C. ₹62,000 + 3 days.

6 — No cross-connection test protocol.

Annual hydrostatic test mandated by NBC Pt 9 § 4.3 — not in the operator’s O&M handover binder.

Fix: documented test protocol + annual schedule + air-gap verification at all GW + potable interfaces (kitchen, ice machines, water dispensers).

What handover finally looked like

After 3 weeks of remediation, handover dossier included:

  • Equalisation tank operational + level alarms tested
  • CPCB-listed media + change-out schedule (sand 18 months, charcoal 12 months)
  • ORP sensor + auto-dose + ORP setpoint 350 mV (oxidative environment guarantee)
  • UV lamp replacement schedule + spare on shelf
  • Pipe colour code per CPCB Annex C; tank labels in English + Kannada + Hindi
  • Annual hydrostatic test + cross-connection audit protocol
  • Daily / weekly / monthly / annual O&M checklist
  • AMC contract with CPCB-empanelled service provider
  • Operator training session for engineering team + housekeeping awareness session

Total remediation cost: ₹9.2 lakh + 3 weeks of pre-opening downtime cost.

12-month operating outcome

Metric Month 1 (handover) Month 12
GW treated volume 22,800 L/day 24,100 L/day (occupancy higher in season 2)
Reuse fraction 88 % 92 %
Treated water turbidity (NTU) 0.8 0.6
Treated water free chlorine (ppm) 0.4 0.5
Bacterial regrowth events 0 0
IGBC WE-3 points earned 2 (75 % reuse) 3 (>90 % reuse — bonus)
Cooling tower top-up via GW 5,500 L/day 6,100 L/day
Operator engineering complaint count 18 (handover) 0 (12 mo)

Why these gotchas matter

The 18-item handover list is not unusual. We’ve seen the same patterns in 4 other branded luxury greywater commissionings 2022-2024. Common theme: GW systems pass on design, fail on commissioning detail.

The detail items individually are small (₹50K – ₹5L). Collectively they are make-or-break for operator handover. Without remediation, the operator’s brand engineering team will block handover, and the developer pays for delay + remedy work both.

The structural fix

Three structural changes to our internal workflow after this project:

1. GW commissioning SOP added to every plumbing design package. The 18-item operator audit list is now baseline scope from SD onward.

2. CPCB-listed filter + media specified at tender. Generic specs are forbidden internally.

3. Operator engineering team brought in at DD review. Pre-opening rather than handover. Costs 2-3 weeks of front-loaded coordination; saves 4-6 weeks of post-handover remediation.

From the Field — Engineer’s Notebook

The single most useful instrument in this commissioning was a portable HACH 2100Q turbidimeter (₹1.2 lakh). With it, we could sample treated water at 12 fixture points across the hotel weekly and produce a turbidity heatmap. Three weeks of data showed two locations where treated-water turbidity was systematically higher (>1.0 NTU vs target <0.5). Investigation revealed sediment in the distribution piping (unflushed on commissioning). A targeted flush + re-disinfection brought all points within spec. Lesson: don't trust the treated-tank exit sample; sample at fixtures. Distribution is where post-treatment problems show up.

5 takeaways

1. Always equalisation-tank ahead of treatment train. Peak flow vs filter sizing is the most common GW design miss.

2. CPCB-listed media + filter manufacturer mandatory. Generic specs lose at operator audit + compliance review.

3. Real-time oxidant + ORP monitoring. Set-and-forget chlorine dosing fails within 72 hours.

4. Distribution flush + multi-point sampling at commissioning. Treated-tank quality ≠ delivered quality.

5. Operator engineering at DD review. Front-load coordination; back-end remediation is 4-5× the cost.

Designer’s checklist

  • [ ] Equalisation tank sized for 3-hour peak HRT
  • [ ] Multimedia filter media + filter manufacturer from CPCB-empanelled list
  • [ ] UV reactor: NSF 55 Class B compliant; lamp replacement schedule
  • [ ] ORP sensor + auto-dose pump; setpoint 300-400 mV
  • [ ] Real-time chlorine residual monitoring
  • [ ] Pipe colour-coding per CPCB Manual Annex C
  • [ ] Multi-language tank labels (English + local + Hindi)
  • [ ] Annual hydrostatic + cross-connection audit protocol
  • [ ] Daily / weekly / monthly / annual O&M checklist
  • [ ] AMC contract with CPCB-empanelled service provider
  • [ ] Operator engineering review at DD (not handover)
  • [ ] Commissioning multi-point fixture sampling + turbidity heatmap
  • [ ] IGBC WE-3 / GRIHA C27 documentation captured

Pairs with: Greywater Recycling IGBC + GRIHA, RWH per CGWA + CPCB, RWH Yield Calculator

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