Leach Fields And Septic Design
A septic system is used when a property is not connected to a public sewer line. The system must be planned carefully so wastewater can move from the building to the septic tank and then into the leach field safely.
Septic Tank And Leach Field Layout
Septic design starts by reviewing the proposed building location, number of bedrooms, site layout, soil conditions, slope, property lines, wells, driveways, and nearby structures. The leach field must be placed where the soil can absorb and treat wastewater properly.
Site Planning And Setbacks
A proper septic site plan shows the septic tank, leach field, reserve area, building footprint, driveway, property lines, wells, utilities, and required setbacks. These details help avoid conflicts with buildings, water sources, drainage paths, and future development.
Code And Permit Coordination
Septic requirements are usually reviewed by the local health department or county authority. Design requirements may include soil testing, perc testing, tank sizing, leach field sizing, separation distances, reserve area requirements, and maintenance access.
What We Can Provide
- Septic site plan
- Septic tank location
- Leach field layout
- Reserve area coordination
- Building footprint
- Property setback review
- Well and utility coordination
- Driveway and access layout
- Drainage direction notes
- Permit-ready septic drawings
Need Septic Design Support?
Send your project address, survey, proposed building layout, number of bedrooms, soil or perc test results, well location, and any county comments. We can prepare a clear septic and leach field site plan for permit review.