More than 6,800 cubic yards of structural concrete are being used in the construction of a new Trickling Filter and Trickling Filter Pump Station in Bismarck, North Dakota. These structures are being built well below the area’s water table, and the more than 6,800 cubic yards of concrete will protect them against the effects of Mother Nature.
Read MoreYear: 2016
Although often considered an industry that is slow to change, the waterworks industry itself has come a long way. Take the fire hydrant for instance. It’s one of the few visible pieces of today’s water distribution system.
Read MoreInfrastructure projects in 2016 are not that different from those in the 1800s: Transportation, communication, power utilities, and sewage and drinking water systems. Today, however, these systems are considerably more complex and expensive.
Read MoreDid you know the earliest planned piped water distribution systems were installed, not for drinking water, but for firefighting? Today, more than one million miles of drinking water pipes form a distribution web that stretches from across the U.S.
Read MoreOn Sept. 15, AMERICAN participated in ‘Imagine a Day Without Water’ — a national online movement to raise awareness about the value of water, the country’s aging and failing water infrastructure, and the need for investment.
Read MoreMorganton, North Carolina, recently became the first city in the state to install zinc-coated ductile iron pipe. Zinc pipe, manufactured by applying a coating of zinc to the pipe’s outer surface, will be used to upgrade the utility’s system.
Read MoreThe front of AMERICAN Cast Iron Pipe Company will be lit in teal at night throughout the month of September as part of a statewide awareness campaign called “A State of Teal.” The purpose is to bring awareness to gynecologic cancers. The campaign […]
Read MoreWhat started as a literacy class in 1916, is now the ACIPCO Bible Class, giving men and women an opportunity to fellowship and study the Word of God. In 2016, the Bible Class celebrates 100 years of the Golden Rule – do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
Read MoreApproximately 80,000 feet of ductile iron pipe is buried beneath the Panama Canal’s expanded footprint, providing potable water, dewatering and fire protection to the new locks’ facilities and surrounding communities.
Read MoreSeveral factors affect the cost and amount of electrical power required to operate a utility system. By calculating how different pipe materials and different types of isolation valves impact energy costs, utilities can potentially save thousands of dollars each year.
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