Sump Pit

kjonulak

New member
Background:
I am in process of building a house and I will have a dedicated aquarium equipment room (AER as my wife and builder are calling it) for my 2 future tanks. One tank will be around 80 gallons and the bigger one will be around 250 gallons. House will be on a slab. I will be running high flex PVC pipe from both tanks under the slab to the AER. The room is 8'x10' and will be 6" below the slab in the rest of the house with a floor drain. Room will have a sink, storage tank for RO/DI water, storage tank for fresh SW, fish and coral QT's.

So right now I still have an option to create a "sump pit" in the room. The pit would be just a concrete hole size and depth to be determined. Most likely 6-8' long, 2' wide and 1.5-2' deep. I could either use a waterproof sealer that's used for ponds or have an acrylic sump made and inserted into the hole.

So I am looking for feedback. Has anyone done this? Do you think it would be a good idea, a bad idea? Thanks.
 
It might be really hard to clean & you would probably need a power head to vacuum the bottom since it's lower then grade.
 
In talking with my builder, doing the sump pit will be easy to build. It will tie in nicely with the flex hoses under the slab so that the water from my tanks will drain into the pit. Pit will be 3' deep, 4' long and 2.5 wide. Most likely I will have an acrylic sump built to fit into the pit. I've read on other forums where folks have used a dedicated wet vac to clean up any detritus in the first chamber of the sump. I will have a floor drain in the room, so I can drain the wet vac into the floor drain. Next week we start work on the house foundation.
 
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