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Current page: EPA Stormwater — Rainwater harvesting / cistern
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Rainwater harvesting: roof drainage to cisterns for non-potable use (irrigation, toilets); 1000+ gal typical residential

EPA Stormwater — Rainwater harvesting / cistern

Description

Roof runoff captured to a cistern or rain barrel + used for non-potable purposes: landscape irrigation, toilet flushing (with separate purple-pipe distribution), washing machine. Typical residential cistern: 500-5000 gal, above- or below-grade. First-flush diverter removes the first ~½ in of runoff (carries roof contaminants). Backflow prevention required between potable + non-potable systems. Local code varies — some jurisdictions require permits + dual plumbing for indoor use.

Why this exists

A 2000-sqft roof in NY (~40 in annual rainfall) collects ~50,000 gal/year — enough to cover most irrigation + significant toilet-flushing demand. Architects designing for sustainability + water-efficiency should integrate the cistern + plumbing routing into the schematic design.

Categories

SitePlumbing

Source

US EPAno manifest entry
EPA Stormwater BMPs + Green Infrastructure (Continuously updated)
Section: Rainwater harvesting / cistern
Published 2024-01-01 · last verified 2026-05-15

Solver enforcement

Browsable only — the solver does not currently enforce this directive (no spec-level data to check against). This entry exists so the architect personas can cite it in conversation and the user can read what the rule says.

Related directives

Last reviewed 2026-05-15.