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Technical Case Study · Gauteng

Trenchless Pipe Rehabilitation Case Study in Corporate Park Retirement Village

Trenchless Pipe Rehabilitation technical case study in Corporate Park, Midrand: CCTV findings, asbestos cement pipe, 160 mm diameter, epoxy brush coating and verification process.

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LocationCorporate Park, Midrand
Pipe160 mm asbestos cement
Length61 m assessed
Methodepoxy brush coating

Client Challenge

The village management team responsible for a low-disruption drainage route in Corporate Park, Midrand needed a repair option that avoided unnecessary excavation. The reported issue was damp walls whenever bathrooms were used, with the main operational risk being resident safety and restricted excavation windows.

The affected route was located below a warehouse floor. That made open trench replacement more disruptive than a controlled diagnostic and trenchless rehabilitation approach.

CCTV Inspection Findings

HydroTrace would first verify the pipe internally before recommending relining. In this scenario, CCTV inspection indicated internal cracks and pinholes on a concealed vertical line. The host pipe was recorded as 160 mm asbestos cement, with approximately 61 m requiring close assessment.

The inspection focus included pipe grade, deformation, connection points, water holding, silt deposits, joint condition and whether the host pipe was suitable for a liner or coating system.

Existing Pipe Details

  • Pipe material: asbestos cement
  • Internal diameter: 160 mm
  • Assessed length: 61 m
  • Access restriction: below a warehouse floor
  • Failure mode: leaking vertical stack

Recommended Rehabilitation Method

The selected approach was epoxy brush coating. This method involves cleaned pipe wall coated internally using a controlled brush-coating system. It was selected because it could reinstate the internal pipe surface while limiting demolition, downtime and reinstatement cost.

Preparation included access planning from existing openings and controlled brush coating. Preparation is critical because relining should never be installed over loose scale, grease, silt or unverified obstructions.

Installation Process

  1. Confirm access points and isolate the working section.
  2. Perform CCTV inspection and mark the affected distances.
  3. Clean the pipe using jetting, descaling or mechanical cleaning.
  4. Reinspect the pipe to confirm readiness for rehabilitation.
  5. Install the epoxy brush coating to the measured section.
  6. Allow the system to cure or set under controlled conditions.
  7. Carry out post-installation CCTV and flow verification.
  8. Issue a technical report with findings, photos or video references where available.

Project Outcome

The intended outcome was to restore flow, reduce water ingress, seal the damaged pipe wall and avoid unnecessary excavation around the low-disruption drainage route. The estimated working window for this scenario was 6 days, depending on access, cleaning difficulty and curing requirements.

For similar sites in Corporate Park and Midrand, HydroTrace would recommend combining CCTV inspection, cleaning and post-repair verification so the client receives a defensible technical record instead of a guess-based repair.

Related HydroTrace Services

Trenchless Pipe Rehabilitation

Technical rehabilitation for damaged drainage, sewer, stormwater or pressure-related infrastructure.

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CCTV Pipe Inspection

Internal camera inspection to confirm pipe condition, defects, route and repair suitability.

View CCTV inspection

Leak Detection

Non-invasive investigation for hidden water loss, dampness and underground leaks.

View leak detection

FAQs

Why was pipe relining considered instead of excavation?

Relining was suitable because the damaged section was accessible from existing inspection points and excavation would have disrupted the site, finishes or operations.

Was CCTV inspection used before the relining decision?

Yes. CCTV inspection is used to confirm pipe condition, locate defects, measure distances and verify whether the line can be cleaned and rehabilitated internally.

Can this method work below concrete or paving?

Yes, where the host pipe still has enough structural profile and access is available, trenchless lining can rehabilitate sections below concrete, paving, roads or buildings.

Is pipe cleaning required before lining?

Yes. Jetting, descaling or mechanical cleaning is required so the liner or coating bonds against a prepared internal pipe surface.

What confirms that the repair worked?

Post-installation CCTV, flow verification and where applicable pressure or water testing are used to confirm the result.