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filterhuis

Filterhuis, Dutch for “filter house,” is a term used in water treatment to describe a building or module that contains filtration equipment used to remove suspended solids from water or wastewater. It forms part of a treatment plant and may contain one or more filter vessels or modules, along with related piping, underdrains, chemical dosing equipment, and controls.

Filtration occurs as water passes through media such as sand, gravel, and sometimes anthracite or activated

Backwashing equipment, with pumps, air scour, and rinse water circuits, cleans the media when clogging occurs.

Historically, filterhouses have been central to drinking water treatment since the 19th century, evolving from simple

carbon.
The
filter
beds
are
housed
in
filter
vessels
arranged
in
parallel
for
maintenance
and
redundancy.
An
underdrain
system
collects
the
filtered
water
and
conveys
it
to
the
effluent
piping,
while
sensors
monitor
the
hydraulic
headloss
across
the
media.
The
filterhouse
may
also
include
a
washwater
channel,
a
small
chemical
dosing
area,
and
a
control
room
with
instrumentation.
In
many
plants,
multiple
filters
run
in
parallel
to
ensure
continuous
operation
and
allow
staged
maintenance.
Modern
filterhouses
support
rapid
gravity
filtration,
membrane
filtration,
or
combinations
thereof,
depending
on
water
quality
requirements.
gravity
beds
to
sophisticated,
automated
units.
Today
they
are
common
in
municipal
waterworks
and,
in
some
cases,
in
industrial
or
wastewater
facilities.