This plan shows the locations of private drain lines and Sydney Water mains running through or near your lot. It’s usually included in your contract of sale; if not, you can obtain one via the Sydney Water Tap-in portal. Sewer positions can materially affect where a granny flat sits on your land and whether encasement works are required. Our designers are highly experienced at crafting layouts that minimise interference with sewer infrastructure and keep associated costs as low as possible.
What If a Main Sewer Line Runs Through Your Preferred Build Location?
Discovering a Sydney Water main beneath the area where you want to place your granny flat does not rule the project out. There are two practical approaches:
Route the design around the buffer zone. The most cost-effective solution in most cases is to reposition the dwelling so that it falls entirely outside the sewer’s zone of influence. Whether this is achievable depends on the width of the buffer, where the pipe sits on the lot and how much usable space remains once setbacks are accounted for.
Construct within the buffer zone. If avoidance is not feasible, building over the main is still permitted — but because Sydney Water retains legal ownership of the pipe, the affected section must be encased in concrete. The encasement needs to extend the full length of the building that overlaps the zone, plus an additional metre at each end. A granny flat that sits across 6 m of the zone, for example, would require 8 m of encasement in total.
Neither scenario is a dead end. Our design team regularly produces efficient layouts that reduce overlap with the restricted zone to the bare minimum, keeping encasement requirements — and the associated costs — as low as practically possible.